PS Vita software update 1.65 adjusts sleep timer Joystiq Mon, 02 Apr 2012 19:26 PM PDT If you've been troubled by your Vita going into sleep mode prematurely while you wait to connect with opponents in Wipeout 2048 , listen up. Firmware version 1.65 -- to be released "soon" adds a new option to the Power Saver settings tab, extending the time before the PS Vita goes into sleep mode to 10 minutes. In addition to the new Power Saver option, a notification alert will be added to the ... | All-nighters can be more harmful than helpful The Daily Mississippian Mon, 02 Apr 2012 18:18 PM PDT Â A popular trend on Facebook says: social life, good grades, sleep â" you can choose two. While many college students choose to sacrifice sleep, studies show that all-nighters can be detrimental to a GPA. Emilie Street, an international studies and public policy leadership freshman, said she pulls all-nighters pretty frequently. âI donât think Iâll pull one this week, but I pull one at least ... | Sleep Apnea discussed KULR-8 Billings Mon, 02 Apr 2012 17:29 PM PDT Sleep apnea is a condition that causes people to periodically stop breathing while they're sleeping. | Rooms available but pricey for Olympics Charleston Daily Mail Mon, 02 Apr 2012 16:37 PM PDT LONDON - Coming for the Olympics with money to spend. Then theres still time to ensure you can take tea at The Ritz, drink at the Savoys American bar, or sleep in an Art Deco room at Claridges.Most of Londons most exclusive hotels have been booked for the ... | Need for sleep The Standard Mon, 02 Apr 2012 16:16 PM PDT Why are so many of us having trouble getting a good night's sleep? Let us count the ways: we are overcaffeinated (coffee, soft drinks, energy drinks, snacks) and overmedicated (prescription drugs, including alcohol), wreaking havoc with slumber patterns. | Why your brain makes you go to sleep seattlepi.com Mon, 02 Apr 2012 16:13 PM PDT We spend a good part of our nights and mornings sleeping, but why? (That's prime online shopping time, after all.) A researcher at Washington State University just landed a $1.3 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to find out why. Sleep scientist Jonathan Wisor wants to find out how our brains' metabolisms might be connected to sleep cycles -- and why we have to sleep so often ... | | |
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