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Archive for the ‘Exponential Technologies’ Category

How 3-D Printed Guns Evolved Into Serious Weapons in Just One Year

May 15, 2014 Leave a comment

A burgeoning subculture of 3-D printed gun enthusiasts dreams of the day when a lethal firearm can be downloaded or copied by anyone, anywhere, as easily as a pirated episode of Game of Thrones.

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Report: Wearables To Go Mainstream By 2025

May 15, 2014 Leave a comment

While wearables are definitely the hot topic of the tech world, without mass market acceptance the gadgets will likely end up as just novelties for the early adopter clique. A new Pew Research study, however, indicates that wearable tech is no mere flash in the pan.

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Google Glass handed out to all medical students at UC Irvine

May 15, 2014 Leave a comment

The fledgling Google Glass is slowly working its way into the mainstream, and one place that people should get used to seeing the device is in hospitals. Several medical institutions have already been testing the computer-enabled eyeglasses to see if the devices enhance doctor’s work.

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Cue to offer at-home, smartphone connected lab tests

May 13, 2014 Leave a comment

A few weeks ago, when we revisited Eric Topol’s top 10 digital health predictions, Topol mentioned microfluidics — and the ability to create home versions of medical lab tests — as one of the unexpected breakthroughs of the last five years.

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Vivify Health raises $3M for home health monitoring platform

May 13, 2014 Leave a comment

Plano, Texas-based remote monitoring startup Vivify Health (formerly Intuitive Health) raised $3 million, according to an SEC filing. This brings Vivify Health’s total announced funding to at least $6.4 million to date.

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Three Harvard hospitals pilot Google Glass app Remedy

May 13, 2014 Leave a comment

Developer of a Google Glass app for doctors, Remedy, launched a pilot study with three Harvard hospitals in which they will provide physicians assistants who are handling night coverage in hospitals — a time when doctors are not around as often as during the day — with Google Glass so that they

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The Not-So-Distant Future When We Can All Upgrade Our Brains

May 13, 2014 Leave a comment

The analysts at the Institute for the Future present new research about our weird times. In a decade, cognitive enhancement may have gone mainstream. Pills can already help you stay up longer, bring more focus to your work, and who knows what else.

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The mosquito solution

May 11, 2014 Leave a comment

Dengue fever infects millions and kills tens of thousands of people around the world each year. But an Australian-led program is showing positive signs of turning this brutal disease into a bite-sized issue.

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Paralysis breakthrough – electrical stimulation enables four paraplegic men to voluntarily move their legs

May 11, 2014 Leave a comment

This weeks issue of the neuroscience journal Brain carries an unusual image; against a background of nerve activity traces a man lies on the ground, and as you scan down the images he lifts his right leg off the ground.

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Recycled blood is better than donated blood for transfusions, Hopkins study finds

May 11, 2014 Leave a comment

We recycle a lot of things — paper, plastic, metal, blood. Yes, blood. During some surgeries, operating room personnel try to capture as much blood as possible and return the red blood cells to your system, instead of, or in addition to, donated blood from a blood bank.

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