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Entrepreneur July 2007 Sara Wilson |
More Than a Mirage Where others saw nothing but desert, a couple looking to train divers saw an ocean of possibilities. |
Inc. August 2008 Leigh Buchanan |
Legacy: Andre Galerne, 1926-2008 An adventurer's approach to life and work. |
AskMen.com Anton Henderson |
How To: Get Your Scuba Diving Certification According to the Professional Association of Diving Instructors, more than 500,000 men and women get certified to dive in the open ocean every year. Here's how you can join them. |
IEEE Spectrum February 2010 Giselle Weiss |
Dream Jobs 2010: Ernst Vollm, Rapture of the Deep Ernst Vollm makes the dive computer that every aquanaut wants |
Finefishing Saltwater Larry Larsen |
Fish Dive In Florida Finding America's favorite fishing & diving waters |
CEO Traveler |
Divers' Paradise Diving in Harbour Village, Bonaire, Netherlands Antilles, The Caribbean |
National Defense May 2007 Grace Jean |
Scientists Bemoan Loss of Exploration Vessel The NR-1 small nuclear-powered submarine has been plying the world's oceans on scientific missions, but is schedule to be inactivated late next year. |
American Family Physician June 1, 2001 |
Medical Problems of Recreational Scuba Diving Recreational scuba diving is defined as pleasure diving to a depth of up to 130 feet without decompression stops. The most common medical problems are simple "squeezes." These can affect your middle ear or face mask during descent... |
The Motley Fool February 4, 2011 David Lee Smith |
This Driller Looks Compelling Diamond Offshore's numbers have slipped, but the company's both attractive and cheap. |
Adventure March 2004 Carl Hoffman |
Wreck Diving's Deep Frontier Recreational divers can now pay to scavenge artifacts from the S.S. Aleutian- and archaeologists are worried. |
Fast Company November 2005 Chuck Salter |
It's Never Been This Hard For a nimble diving company based in Louisiana, Hurricane Katrina posed enormous challenges -- and offered huge opportunity. |
Fast Company September 2000 Bill Breen |
(Really) Risky Business Wes Skiles is one of the leading practitioners of what may be the world's most hazardous sport: underwater cave diving. There is no injury rate for mistakes made in an underwater cave -- only a mortality rate. So why does Skiles keep diving? |
Popular Mechanics December 2006 Glenn Harlan Reynolds |
Seeking New Depths High-tech test dive: Will the spread of bubble-free rebreather systems change diving forever? |
Wired January 2002 |
Verge A Deepwater Ocean Simulator simulates deep-sea environments for testing parts and equipment to be used underwater by various industries, including oil and communications... |
National Defense May 2011 Stew Magnuson |
New Applications, Markets Sought For Underwater Communication System A new technology designed to communicate with submarines as they travel stealthily at great depths and speeds is now being looked at as a means to send messages to special operations divers and commands to unmanned underwater vehicles. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics January 2006 John Keller |
DARPA approaches industry for ideas for unmanned underwater surveillance technology The agency seeks to improve underwater surveillance in and along ocean coasts, ocean harbors, lakes, and rivers with a distributed set of stationary and mobile assets. |
The Motley Fool October 2, 2006 Dan Caplinger |
Know Your Numbers: Construction Spending By using the Census Bureau's construction spending report, you can identify trends and countertrends in construction and use your conclusions to improve your understanding of the overall economy and to inform your personal investment decisions. |