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Apple's CEO is the most characteristic pitchman in business. Learn how to apply his secrets to your next presentation.
Microsoft’s upcoming $100 million campaign by JWT to promote its search engine demonstrates its fundamental misunderstanding of tech marketing – and may also quickly advertise the search engine’s inferiority to Google.
Think your income disqualifies your teen for aid? It's a common assumption, but it's wrong.

Discovery News - Animals
News on animals from Discovery
- Fossil Feathers Reveal Extinct Moa's True Colors
A stash of fossil feathers from the extinct Moa reveal a wealth of information. - Giant, Spitting Worms Garner Protection Plea
Supporters of the Palouse earthworm file a petition to protect this rare, giant worm. - Cancer: Another Threat to Wildlife
Wild animals get cancer too and the disease is another conservation threat. - Predatory Dingoes Promote Diversity
Although perceived as invasive predators, dingoes actually protect biodiversity. - Pigeons Make Good Art Critics
Pigeons have the potential to learn and mark a "good" piece art from a "bad" one. - Fish's Ears Get Bigger in Acidic Water
Fish ears grow up to 17 percent larger when CO2 levels are increased in water. - One-Third of Sharks Now Face Extinction
A new study shows that a third of ocean sharks now face extinction. - Spotted Owls Face Genetic Bottleneck
Faced with declining populations, spotted owls have lost genetic diversity. - Spider Mimics Ants to Scare off Predators
This unusual spider fends off other spiders by mimicking the behavior an ant. - Giant Elephant Fossil Unearthed in Java
Scientists uncover the most complete prehistoric elephant skeleton ever found in the tropics. - Caribou Populations See Rapid Decline
Caribou and reindeer herds have dwindled by nearly 60 percent on average. - Lynx Brought Back from the Brink
The severely endangered Iberian lynx is making a slow but steady comeback in captivity. - Great White Sharks Hunt Like Serial Killers
Jack the Ripper had plenty in common with great white sharks, according to new research. - Carbon Credits Could Help Rainforest Animals
Carbon markets could protect threatened species, as well as reduce emissions. - Mekong River Dolphin Nearly Extinct
Freshwater dolphins in Cambodia and Laos are on the brink of extinction due to pollution. - PETA Wishes Obama Hadn't Swatted That Fly
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals wants Obama to be kinder to pesky flies. - Twittering Helps Shrews Find Their Way
Shrews use primitive echolocation to "see" past obstacles and navigate. - 'Genius Fish' Strategizes Like Humans
The nine-spined stickleback can think and learn like we humans do, researchers find. - Antivenoms Can't Stop Deadly Jellyfish Sting
A box jellyfish antivenom is proven ineffective against the animal's deadly sting. - Bed Bug Weapon Uses Insect's Own Juice
A new weapon against bed bugs includes the insects' own pheromones. - Ancient Beasts Thrived in Arctic Swamps
Swamp beasts of the prehistoric Canadian high Arctic survived the polar darkness on rotting plants. - Climate Change? Big Mammals Can Adapt
Big mammals may be unexpectedly flexible to climate change, research finds. - Bird Flu Survives in Landfills
Bird flu can survive for up to two years in bird carcasses that have been dumped into landfills. - Chimps, Other Apes Laugh Like People
Chimps and other primates laugh the way we do, research finds. - First Pig Stem Cells Created
The world's first pig stem cells are created and could be used to battle human disease. - Some City Rats Roam Far From Home
Most city rats stay local, but a few adventurous ones stray further, foiling pest controls. - Tracking Penguin Poop From Space
Researchers followed Emperor penguin poop trails from space to track at-risk colonies. - Chimp-Made Toolkit Most Complex Ever Found
Chimps create an impressive five-piece toolkit for extracting honey. - Rare Baby Panda Born in Thai Zoo
A baby panda birth makes Thailand only the third country to breed a panda in captivity. - Toothy Sharks Once Ruled Tuscany
Under the Tuscan soil lie the fossilized remains of some toothy ancient residents. - Monkeys Pass on Inserted Gene
Transgenic monkeys are shown to pass newly acquired genes to their offspring. - Sperm Whale Caught Stealing Fish on Video
Video of a sperm whale stealing fish reveals how these sneaky marine giants foil fishermen. - Desert Tortoises Get Real Estate Map
Predicting where displaced animals could live may become a major conservation tool. - Hair Loss Gene Found in Mice
A mouse gene linked to hair loss could lead to treatments for baldness in people. - Rooks Quickly Learn Tool-Use
Laboratory studies with rooks show the birds quickly pick up how to use tools to get food. - Whales Need Major Rebound, Study Shows
The oceans once supported far more animals than exist today. Could it happen again? - Swine Flu Genes Circulated for a Decade
Pigs may have hosted genes included in the new swine flu for a decade or more. - Tasmanian Devils Listed as Endangered
A contagious cancer has wiped out most wild Tasmanian devils. - English Cocker Spaniel: Born to Be Bad?
The doe-eyed English cocker spaniel may be the world's most aggressive breed. - Birds Under Stress Become Better Singers
Male birds sing more elaborately under stress to prove they're good learners -- and survivors. - Flight of the Bumblebee: Inefficient But Precise
Bumblebees use brute force to fly around, but they have fine control. - Introducing the Fuel-Efficient Cow
Will genetic engineering be the solution to livestock methane emissions? - Life on Earth May Have Begun Much Earlier
Primitive life forms may have survived a period of intense bombardment on early Earth. - Sea Creatures Inspire CO2 Sponge
The porous structure of echinoderms offer a model for a greenhouse gas sponge.