Houston Astros Report: The evolution of the rainbow uniform revealed – House of Houston

SEATTLE, WA - JUNE 24: Starter Lance McCullers Jr.

Houston Texans: Five Reasons why Deshaun Watson could be great or a bust by Kenneth Cline

The rainbow uniform design has continued to be one of my favorite Houston Astros uniform design pieces and its right up there with the Shooting Star design of the 1960s. The design of the uniform that I mention of lasted for 21 years from 1975-86 and it has truly stood the test of time.

Paul Lukas of ESPN.com wrote a spectacular piece in regard to the untold story of the uniforms and how one begotten design firm created something that was revolutionary in its own right. Although I wasnt alive when the unis debuted back in 1975, I do recall seeing them at games in the Astrodome before they were modified after the 1986 season, one of the best in team history.

Seeing greats like Nolan Ryan and guys like Mike Scott, Alan Ashby, Jim Deshaies and Billy Hatcher don those uniforms was nothing short of amazing.

I didnt get to go to many games in my early childhood as my family was growing at the time and all my parents resources were focused on keeping a roof over our head and plenty of food to eat. But there were many occasions where I got to go to games and Id just be in awe of the luminosity of the unis as well as the effervescence of our home field, fresh off multi-million dollar renovation where whole interior appeared to be a giant rainbow.

I want to let you read the piece itself but Gary Rollins, the director of Astros TV and radio network, was more in favor of the traditional design like the Detroit Tigers and Los Angeles Dodgers but was steered more in the direction of something more bold. The network was hemorrhaging money at the time and were on the verge of declaring bankruptcy. But it was the new look that staved off such a notion and were a big hit.

Heres a categorization of the evolution by uni expert Paul Lukas:

I do disagree with Lukas in regard to the notion of the 75 jerseys being the best. Im just not a fan of the number being encapsulated in a circle but Im more in favor of the final rehash that continued from 1977-86. Even former Astros president and general manager Tal Smith lobbied hard to get the circle removed.

There were also sorts of designs proposed from a white star on the front to a unique-looking A on the cap of the uniform as well as orange pants. Take a look of those pics None of those wouldve been a good idea because one needs the audacity of such a new concept but not the point of being too tacky. I think the Houston Astros found a perfect medium with the two, hence the design that many of us still wear to this day as a homage to a notable era in franchise history.

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It wouldve been an injustice had this story had not been told and Im glad that a fellow journalist went out to seek the truth and to report it as fully as possible. That is, of course, one of the guiding principles in this business. Lets hope this design continues to stand the test of time like it already has.

Go Astros.

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Houston Astros Report: The evolution of the rainbow uniform revealed - House of Houston

School Shootings And Evolution: A Response To Pastor Hines – Patheos (blog)

Today Im going to do something unusual: write a direct and explicit response to a Christian. Instead of doing this to another Patheos blogger I am instead going to write to a Christian pastor who publishes videos on YouTube. The pastorI am responding to is Pastor Hines.I encourage any readers of mine to view the video by Pastor Hines. His channel is named Toward a Biblical and Christian Worldview.

Pastor Hines seems to truly believe that he can reduce gun violence but provides no evidence to support this idea.

He claims teaching evolutionand natural selection to children will cause them to lash out and act like animals. He claims that teaching the extraterrestrial origin of life (which no one teaches in the United States as far as I know, at least not as the definitive origin of life on this planet) is child abuse. Pastor Hines claims that abortion is murder and that we celebrate sexual filth. Pastor Hines claims its abusive to indoctrinate children into lies. He also claims that he and those in his camp can understand the world in a way that we as evolutionists cannot. Pastor Hines also tries to claim in a roundabout way that there are no Christian school shooters. Not true.

There is no connection between belief in evolution and school shootings in or out of the United States. Thats a blunt statement but its one that can easily be shown to be true. In order to examine this thoroughly and actually see why Ive arrived at this conclusion lets look at Ballotpedias map of school shootings from 1990 to the present. If you look at it carefully youll notice the most religious area, the south, has the most school shootings. That alone is enough to rip apart the claim that a belief in evolution inherently leads to a population of students more likely to engage in school shootings. But if thats not enough to convince you think about this: theres an article on Quartz which compares school shootings in the United States with multiple victims to school shootings in 36 other countries with multiple victims, whose combined total population is around 3.8 billion people.

I do not want people to leave here thinking I believe belief in Christianity leads to an increased likelihood of a student shooting up a school. I dont believe that. I believe that there are a multitude of factors which influence the possibility that a student or outsider might shoot up a school. But the idea that belief in evolution somehow positively correlates with an increase risk of school shootings is unsupported by evidence.

Victims of school shootings are not playthings you can use to make nonsensical points about the importance of your religion. These are both living and dead victims of a tragedy and I cannot fathom how vile a human being Pastor Hines must be to think that this is an acceptable thing to do. I cannot imagine how despicable someone must be to consider this an appropriate action.

Christianity alone will not reduce school shootings or other instances of violence in and out of school. It just wont and pretending that your religion is a universal remedy for very real violence and ignorance is dangerous. We need to find a way to reduce gun violence but I dont believe for a second that encouraging people to convert to any single religion will actually cause a detectable dip in violence. This pastor wants to make his listeners believe that violence can be reduced due to his religious beliefs. It hasnt been.

One of the biggest issues with the claims of Pastor Hines is that he provides no evidence for them. He doesnt even try. He just boldly asserts what he believes the world ought to be like but almost religiously refuses to back his claims. He doesnt deserve a venue with which to make these ignorant claims if he cant even be bothered to pretend to research them.

Another response to Pastor Hines has been created by the excellent YouTuber Essence Of Thought:

We need to have conversations about this backed by evidence. Pastor Hines is not interested in having such a conversation and this can be determined by examining his remarkable focus on a single school shooting, even if its one of the most violent in living memory. If we actually want to prevent more school shootings we need to carefully look at and analyze various school shootings to come across commonalities, and not make ignorant assertions about what we believe the causes are of a single shooting. Pastors like Pastor Hines do not help us move closer to a world with less school shootings.

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School Shootings And Evolution: A Response To Pastor Hines - Patheos (blog)

Evolution key as Eddie Jones plots England’s path to World Cup glory – ESPN.co.uk

Eddie Jones says England will need to be the "best prepared team in the world" to return from Japan victorious.

TWICKENHAM -- Fail to prepare, prepare to fail. That is the adage driving England on as Eddie Jones attempts to mastermind 2019 Rugby World Cup glory.

The tournament in Japan does not kick off for another 25 months, but with their Pool C opponents confirmed, England have already begun to plan for their assault on the Webb Ellis Cup.

Eddie Jones believes Manu Tuilagi can "demolish" the All Blacks and branded Leicester's wrecking-ball centre worth every ounce of effort poured into rebuilding his injury-hit England career.

Manu Tuilagi has returned to the England squad for their three-day preseason training session this weekend.

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Jones is constantly looking to improve his side -- both on and off the field -- and with that in mind he and members of his backroom staff have looked to sports as diverse as football, formula one, cycling and bobsleigh for inspiration.

"We need to be the best prepared team in the world because to win the World Cup is going to take an extraordinary performance," Jones told reporters at a media briefing Friday.

"And to have an extraordinary performance, we have to have an extraordinary preparation."

They will also, more than likely, need to beat New Zealand. Jones hinted that he had spotted a weakness in the back-to-back champions over the summer, suggesting the All Blacks are "experiencing problems with their depth" as squad players head to Europe.

England are not scheduled to play the All Blacks prior to the World Cup, but signs from their own June tour were encouraging as a side shorn of 15 British & Irish Lions players sealed a 2-0 series win in Argentina.

Jones is not one to get carried away, though, and he knows there is plenty of work to do if England are to return from Japan victorious. On Friday, he admitted he did not have any players at his disposal who would strike fear in opponents.

"We're developing players who are going to be like that," he said.

Billy Vunipola, back in the training squad announced Thursday as he continues to recover from the shoulder injury that ended his Lions tour before it had begun, is one who Jones predicts has the potential to become world class.

Then there are the nine debutants from Argentina retained for the camp on the outskirts of London, with Tom Curry and Sam Underhill both receiving praise. "They've got a range of skills, a range of toughness to set them up to play Test rugby."

The inclusion of the opensides hints at an evolution in the back row. James Haskell's performances under Jones mean he has credit in the bank but the fight for the No. 7 jersey is on.

And that is, perhaps, the secret to England's success over the last 18 months. Everyone from captain Dylan Hartley to the coaching staff knows that if their level drops then their place in the group is under threat.

"No one's set in stone apart from myself for the next game," Jones said. "Everyone's got to keep improving. That's the challenge ahead."

On the pitch Jones is determined to see an improvement in how well his side uses the ball. He believes pragmatic rugby, building through phases to put the opposition under pressure, is a thing of the past.

"You've got to be able to crack the opposition in the first three phases," he said. "Find the space, use the ball, keep the ball alive, and be accurate in your skill work.

"So, that would be what we'd like to see. But that's not going to happen overnight. It takes time, it takes effort, it takes application."

It is the type of rugby that sets the All Blacks apart from every other rugby playing nation, and Jones' desire to depose New Zealand as the world's No. 1 side is behind his willingness to gamble on the talent of Manu Tuilagi.

The Leicester centre is still some way short of a return to the Test arena, as Jones himself admitted, but he possesses an irresistible ability to break the gain line and put into practice the type of game plan that the England coach craves.

"I know the kid himself is working as hard as he can to get back on the field," Jones said. "At the moment everything looks pretty positive so we've just got to pray that this positivity keeps going and he has a period where he can be injury-free and show what he's capable of."

The memory might be fading but England fans are well aware what Tuilagi is capable of. In 2012 the centre capped a wonderful performance with a try as the All Blacks were beaten 38-21 at Twickenham.

It was a game Jones alluded to Friday as he said: "No one's ripped them [New Zealand] apart, apart from Manu."

Jones added: "He loves rugby and he wants to play for England. He loves playing for England.

"He's doing everything he can to get ready and I'm impressed by his dedication because he's had a tough time. The amount of injuries he's had would be enough to knock people away."

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Evolution key as Eddie Jones plots England's path to World Cup glory - ESPN.co.uk

Santa Fe Opera thinks different with The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs – Toronto Star

Garrett Sorenson as Steve Wozniak and Edward Parks as Steve Jobs in Santa Fe Opera's The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs.( KEN HOWARD FOR SANTA FE OPERA )

SANTA FE, N.M.Many of us want to change the world. Steve Jobs did. Or so, plausibly, claims the brochure for this seasons Santa Fe Opera, which has just premiered a full-length, one-act opera titled The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs.

The creative entrepreneur who gave the world Apple hardware and software, yanking even the most reluctant of us into the computer age, may not seem the likeliest of subjects for tenors and sopranos. But Santa Fe Opera, currently under the direction of Charles MacKay, is no ordinary opera company.

Housed in a strikingly modern, mostly outdoor facility, nestled literally in the desert outside New Mexicos centuries-old capital city, this innovative enterprise has been, for decades, an incubator for emerging as well as established operatic talent.

Read more: Opera in New Mexico desert draws Canadian musicians

Igor Stravinsky turned up for its first season in 1957 to attend a production of his only full-length operatic work, The Rakes Progress. And as recently as two years ago, every seat was sold for its entire run before the curtain went up on the premiere of Jennifer Higdons Cold Mountain.

Even so, The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs represented a particular challenge, a first opera by an American composer who (like Higdon) is known largely for his instrumental music, based on the life of a recently deceased (2011) global superstar.

Although Mason Bates and his librettist Mark Campbell insisted that they were not about to produce a documentary theirs is an interpretation of the life and character of Jobs, without the co-operation of their subjects family or of his company neither can it be called a work of fiction.

The story begins in the garage of the Jobs family home in Los Altos, Calif., when Paul Jobs presents his son with a work bench for his 10th birthday.

Thereafter, the libretto moves forward and back through time, visiting pivotal moments in the grown-up boys career, all within Vita Tzykuns unit set, whose walls expand and contract to provide projection surfaces for changing locales.

The libretto is hardly hagiography. The Steve Jobs we meet appears driven, self-centred and only almost likeable when he finally faces his own mortality. In the title role, baritone Edward Parks may not even sound Jobs-like (the real person apparently spoke in a rather high-pitched tenor), but his characterization, complete with an Issey Miyake black turtleneck and Levis 510 jeans, is certainly credible.

Those who know the actual Jobs story, whether by reading Walter Isaacsons monumental biography or through the various other attempts to pin the butterfly, will recognize the cast of characters, from the girlfriend and child he abandoned to the best friend and partner (Steve Wozniak) he cruelly offended, all of whom are portrayed sympathetically under Kevin Newburys direction.

But of course, what matters most in an opera is its music and the music of Bates has turned out to be a clever amalgam of the live and the electronic (whirring electronica, in the composers own words), with Bates himself sitting at a console in the pit next to conductor Michael Christie.

This takes us back to the days of Haydn and Mozart, when composers routinely participated in performances of their own operas, yet it is no mere nostalgic stunt. Bates has sought to give his characters not identifying leitmotifs, in the Wagnerian manner, but individual sound worlds, using samples of what he calls Mac gear. To characterize Jobs spiritual adviser, a Buddhist monk, he even incorporates Tibetan prayer bowls and Chinese gongs.

The music is accessible and sufficiently transparent in its scoring that the words come through with surprising clarity (something that did not happen in the score for Cold Mountain). A major opera? Perhaps not but surely an effective one, with the power to bring an entire audience to its feet. An extra performance has already been added to its run.

The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs is running this season in repertory with four other, more traditional works: Handels Alcina, Donizettis Lucia di Lammermoor, Rimsky-Korsakovs The Golden Cockerel and Strausss Die Fledermaus. I attended performances of two of them.

Lucia di Lammermoor offered in the American soprano Brenda Rae one of the finest vocal actresses I have yet witnessed in the operas famous mad scene. And The Golden Cockerel sported a set by Gary McCann marvellously evocative of the constructivist designs to come out of post-Revolutionary Russia.

Reasons enough for a trip into the New Mexico desert? You bet.

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Santa Fe Opera thinks different with The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs - Toronto Star

Robotic Industries Association – Official Site

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WannaCry Ransomware ‘Hero’ Arrested in Las Vegas on Hacking Charges – Casino.Org News

News Legal WannaCry Ransomware Hero Arrested in Las Vegas on Hacking Charges

Marcus Hutchins, the man who was hailed this past May as a hero for stopping the spread of WannaCry ransomware, will be in a Las Vegas courtroom on Friday afternoon, facing Department of Justice (DOJ) charges. Hutchins stands accused of being a co-conspirator in the creation of another malware system aimed at hacking bank accounts, which the DOJ alleges occurred for a year, between July of 2014 and 2015.

Marcus Hutchins, a computer security expert credited with stopping the WannaCry virus in May, was arrested Wednesday at McCarran Airport on charges he tried to distribute another type of malware. He will enter a plea in a Las Vegas courtroom on Friday afternoon. (Image: Bloomberg)

He was arrested in Las Vegas on Wednesday at McCarran International airport by FBI agents, as he waited to head back home to Britain after attending two global security conferences that ran in late July.

The 23-year-old is being charged with six counts, all involving his alleged involvement with the formation and propagation of Trojan Kronos, a software program that was aimed at infecting bank accounts. The bug is capable of stealing banking logins and other financial information.

Hutchins was charged along with another as-yet unnamed person, who the Justice Department accuses of uploading and selling the malware, but at least one cyber criminal defense attorney doesnt think the DOJ has a very compelling case.

Talking to the UKs Telegraph, American attorney Tor Ekeland described the situation this way:

By [arresting Hutchins], theyve made the internet less safe because nobody in their right mind is likely to help the US Government stop attacks now. Theyve sent a really bad message that even if you help stop a major malware attack and save people millions of dollars you could be arrested because someone you supposedly associated with supposedly sold malware for $2,000.

Ekeland added that while Hutchins could face as much as 40 years in prison for his actions, he doesnt think its likely.

I doubt it, it would be a bizarre outcome. Is it possible? It sure is, he noted to the Telegraph.

Hutchins was in the US attending conferences Black Hat and Def Con, two conventions for people interested in computer security. Seminars highlight any and all issues of interest to security and surveillance professionals, including, of course, cyber hacking, which has become the modern-day equivalent of the 18th centurys highwaymen.

Word of Hutchins arrest went viral and most who know him by his Twitter handle of @MalwareTechBlog were shocked, posting their disbelief via their own tweets on the social media site.

Andrew Mabbitt, founder of cyber firm Fidus Information Security, said on Twitterthat he and others were trying to find him a lawyer and would be starting an online crowdfunding account.

I refuse to believe the charges against @MalwareTechBlog, Mabbittsaid. He spent his career stopping malware, not writing it.

But a DOJ presser on the matter described a two-year investigation that had gathered evidence against Hutchins, including a tweet that he put out in July 13, 2014 soliciting others for a copy of the Kronos virus.

Could this Tweet by Hutchins from 2014 be his death knell? The DOJ says it is damning, but others claim it means nothing malicious. (Image: Twitter)

The indictment charges him with six counts, including one count of conspiracy to commit computer fraud and abuse, three counts of distributing and advertising an electronic communication interception device, one count of endeavoring to intercept electronic communications, and one count of attempting to access a computer without authorization.

Depending on Hutchins plea on Friday, he could remain in Las Vegas or be transferred to Wisconsin, which was where the DOJ made the charges, according to Ekeland. If the latter, the attorney (who is not representing Hutchins as we go to press) says it could take anywhere from a few months to as long as three years to come to trial. He adds that he doubts Hutchins will be allowed to post bail, given his foreign national status and the potential for flight risk.

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The Music Industry Panel at Summer in the City 2017 – TenEighty

The Music Industry panel took place on Friday at Summer in the City 2017. It featured musicians Dodie Clark and Will Joseph Cook, and managers Dan Market, Emma Jay Marsh, and Carl Young, as well as BBC Radio 1 presenter Phil Taggart. It was chaired bymanager and A&R scoutJoshua Edwards.

The panel revolved around the music industry, particularly how online distribution has affected it. It was held in Panel Room A and led to discussions about online streaming, music genres, and Ed Sheeran (which divided the panel).

Josh decided to turn the panel into Never Mind the BuzzJosh, splitting the panel into teams of two. To Joshs dismay, the panellists did not come with prepared team names as apparently no-one had read his email. Will and Phil named themselves Will and Phil, Carl and Dodie became DodiCarl, and Dan and Emma became Outboxes. After handing each team a buzzer and showing the prize (a signed photo of himself), Josh began the discussion.

They first talked about the current climate of our fast-growing digital age and its impact on the music industry.

Will emphasised the importance of putting things out there, especially if youre at the beginning of your career, stating that you should just want to get it out there, whatever needs to be done. I would just throw as many things at the wall as possible. Phil agreed, emphasising the importance of uploading because if you dont exist on a streaming platform, it doesnt exist its the central thing that then hooks other things. Dodie shared her observations, noting that as shes put more of her music on platforms such as Spotify and released physical copies, shes seen her audience grow.

Dan noted that playing live concerts is important for a lot of artists at the beginning: Its all very well getting a billion views on Spotify and YouTube, but you need to make it real. You have to have a balance. Will agreed, sharing a story of how one of his friends receives a huge reach and makes money from it, but struggles to fill seats at his shows.

The conversation moved on to audiences, demographics, and how artists capitalise on them. Dodie has found that she is now starting to be recognised online for her music alone, and not just for YouTube. She said her method has been: Heres all of me at once. There you go!

Josh moved on to the next lines round, where the panellists had to continue the lyrics he read out. They struggled through Adele, Stormzy, and Drake but managed to catch some points.

Returning to the discussion, they talked about using major labels and indie labels, with Josh noting that attitudes towards major labels and traditional methods are turning sour. Will, who is on a major label, explained that on an indie label, they can be more agile and keep with the times, and thats good as things are changing so much. However, he feels that there is a ceiling that indie artists hit, whilst major record labels can reach bigger platforms such as Radio 1 more easily.

Phil runs his own indie record company namedHometown Records. He explained that indie records offer a small family: If weve got one or two artists on our label, then theyre a massive priority for us. We want to keep the people, we want to keep the family. We can train them up like in kindergarten until a major label comes along with a big cheque. And Im not bitter about it at all! he joked. Dan emphasised the importance of defining who you are as an artist overall, trying to understand where you exist culturally and the definition of your art, and understand where you want to get to. The panel agreed that it was easier to work with talent when they had an idea of who they were and where they wanted to go with their career.

Dodie shared her perspective as an unsigned artist. She felt that if she was signed, more people would tell her what to do: With my channel, Im taking it along with me and showing what its like to build a brand. The downside is that she has to find her own jobs however, her manager helps her.

Josh then asked if it was more important to have an engaged fanbase over having high statistics. Dodie shared that some people feel shes cheating with her music as she already had an established audience. However, Phil jumped in to point out, You started from music. Youre not like Jake Paul! The panel rolled their eyes, with Dodie exclaiming, Hes ruining it for us!, and Phil said, Hes everywhere. Dab on those haters.

Will emphasised that it was important to know why youre making music, and the importance of connecting or entertaining people. Phil agreed: Its better to have 20 people who are super engaged with your videos than to get 1 million views and never comment.

Josh then led the discussion to movements in music, asking the panellists if the music industry were killing movements in music by oversaturating the market with imitations or if it was just part of the natural cycle of music. Phil felt it was just natural: Everything has its day. Somewhere now, theres a kid in his basement making music that well listen to in five years time. Carl felt that music was so diverse, it will continue to evolve. Will was less optimistic: Someone makes something, it does well. Then the music industry copies it, it does badly, and then everyone hates that and the original.

Josh put up a photo of Ed Sheeran and asked the panel, What do people see inthat? Dodie pointed out that he made his brand to be a grounded, cool, and genuine guy, but now hes getting attacked for that. Phil replied that he could buy a building and knock it down for a laugh. Josh felt that because of the strength of his fanbase, he can do no wrong, even when he releases a subpar album.

Up next was the round If this is the answer, what is the question?, with the panellists guessing Spotify streams and awards and discussing Psy.

Then, Josh asked the panellists to discuss a recent Guardian article that stated that there was a glass ceiling for women in music. Emma felt that there wasnt a ceiling, pointing out Beyonce and Rihanna. Will said that its hard for any new bands to come through. Phil felt that it was a complicated issue: I dont know why its so hard to get into the singles chart. With Spotify, you have so many playlists and so many songs listened to passively. Emma concluded that it was hard to define what was a hit sometimes things get played loads but theyre not selling.

The panel took questions from the audience. One person asked whether it was important to keep putting things out there or whether to wait until youre able to release better quality music. Phil shared that hed listened to some good lo-fi stuff and sometimes its deliberately been made lo-fi, and emphasised the importance of making music that hits people emotionally. Dodie agreed: If your song is good enough, it doesnt matter. How many videos have you seen on your Facebook thats just someone in their bedroom? Will pointed out that no-ones expecting high quality stuff its weird if it is high quality.

The panel rounded off with the panel guessing how many times Shape of You by Ed Sheeran has been played on Spotify (the answer is1,000,042,405 plays). Will and Phil were the winning team and left the stage with a signed and framed photo of Josh.

Photos by George Yonge.

Check out our Summer in the City tag, where youll find all of our coverage.

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The Music Industry Panel at Summer in the City 2017 - TenEighty

Why Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality are the same thing – Computerworld

Words matter. And as a stickler for accuracy in language that describes technology, it pains me to write this column.

I hesitate to expose the truth, because the public is already confused about virtual reality (VR), augmented reality (AR), mixed reality (MR), 360-degree video and heads-up displays. But facts are facts. And the fact is that the technology itself undermines clarity in language to describe it.

Before we get to my grand thesis, let's kill a few myths.

Silicon Valley just produced a mind-blowing new virtual reality product. It's a sci-fi backpack that houses a fast computer to power a high-resolution VR headset. Welcome to the future of VR gaming, right?

Wrong.

While the slightly-heavier-than-10-pound backpack is conceptually similar to existing gaming rigs, it's actually designed for enterprises, as well as healthcare applications. It's called the Z VR Backpack from HP. It works either with HP's new Windows Mixed Reality Headset or with HTC's Vive business edition headset, and houses a Windows 10 Pro PC, complete with an Intel Core i7 processor, 32GB of RAM and, crucially, an Nvidia Quadro PS2000 graphics card. It also has hot-swappable batteries.

Will HP's new enterprise-ready VR backpack deliver mixed reality, augmented reality or virtual reality? The answer is yes!

To me, the biggest news is that HP plans to open 13 customer experience centers around the world to showcase enterprise and business VR applications. If that surprises you, it's because the narrative around VR is that it's all about immersive gaming and other "fun" applications. It's far more likely that professional uses for VR will dwarf the market for consumer uses.

All of these technologies have been around for decades, at least conceptually. Just now, on the brink of mainstream use for both consumer and business applications, it's important to recognize that different people mean different things when they use the labels to describe these new technologies.

A Singapore-based company called Yi Technology this week introduced an apparently innovative mobile gadget called the Yi 360 VR Camera. The camera takes 5.7k video at 30 frames per second, and is capable of 2.5k live streaming.

Impressive! But is 360-degree video "virtual reality"? Some (like Yi) say yes. Others say no. (The correct answer is "yes" more on that later.)

Mixed reality and augmented reality are also contested labels. Everyone agrees that both mixed reality and augmented reality describe the addition of computer-generated objects to a view of the real world.

One opinion about the difference is that mixed reality virtual objects are "anchored" in reality they're placed specifically, and can interact with the real environment. For example, mixed reality objects can stand on or even hide behind a real table.

By contrast, augmented reality objects are not "anchored," but simply float in space, anchored not to physical spaces but instead to the user's field of view. That means Hololens is mixed reality, but Google Glass is augmented reality.

People disagree.

An alternative definition says that mixed reality is a kind of umbrella term for virtual objects placed into a view of the real world, while augmented reality content specifically enhances the understanding of, or "augments," reality. For example, if buildings are labeled or people's faces are recognized and information about them appears when they're in view, that's augmented reality in this definition.

Under this differentiation, Google Glass is neither mixed nor augmented reality, but simply a heads-up display information in the user's field of view that neither interacts with nor refers to real-world objects.

Complicating matters is that the "mixed reality" label is falling out of favor in some circles, with "augmented reality" serving as the umbrella term for all technologies that combine the real with the virtual.

If the use of "augmented reality" bothers you, just wait. That, too, may soon become unfashionable.

And now we get to the confusing bit. Despite clear differences between some familiar applications of, say, mixed reality and virtual reality, other applications blur the boundaries.

Consider new examples on YouTube.

One video shows an app built with Apple's ARKit, where the user is looking at a real scene, with one computer-generated addition: A computer-generated doorway in the middle of the lane creates the illusion of a garden world that isn't really there. The scene is almost entirely real, with one door-size virtual object. But when the user walks through the door, they are immersed in the garden world, and can even look back to see the doorway to the real world. On one side of the door, it's mixed reality. On other side, virtual reality. This simple app is MR and VR at the same time.

A second example is even more subtle. I'm old enough to remember a pop song from the 1980s called Take On Me by a band called A-ha. In the video, a girl in a diner gets pulled into a black-and-white comic book. While inside, she encounters a kind of window with "real life" on one side and "comic book world" on the other.

Someone explicitly created an app that immerses the user in a scenario identical to the "A-ha" video, wherein a tiny window gives a view into a charcoal-sketch comic world clearly "mixed reality" but then the user can step into that world, entering a fully virtual environment, with the exception of a tiny window into the real world.

This scenario is more semantically complicated than the previous one because all the "virtual reality" elements are in fact computer-modified representations of real-world video. It's impossible to accurately describe this app using either "mixed reality" or "virtual reality."

When you look around and see a live, clear view of the room you're in, that's 360-degree video, not virtual reality. But what if you see live 360 video of a room you're not in one on the other side of the world? What if that 360 video is not live, but essentially recorded or mapped as a virtual space? What if your experience of it is like you're tiny, like a mouse in a giant house, or like a giant in a tiny house? What if the lights are manipulated, or multiple rooms from different houses stitched together to create the illusion of the same house? It's impossible to differentiate at some point between 360 video and virtual reality.

Purists might say live, 360 video of, say, an office, is not VR. But what if you change the color of the furniture in software? What if the furniture is changed in software to animals? What if the walls are still there, but suddenly made out of bamboo? Where does the "real" end and the "virtual" begin?

Ultimately, the camera that shows you the "reality" to be augmented is merely a sensor. It can show you what you would see, along with virtual objects in the room, and everybody would be comfortable calling that mixed reality. But what if the app takes the motion and distance data and represents what it sees in a changed form. Instead of your own hands, for example, it could show robot hands in their place, synchronized to your actual movement. Is that MR or VR?

The next version of Apple maps will become a kind of VR experience. You'll be able to insert an iPhone into VR goggles and enter 3D maps mode. As you turn your head, you'll see what a city looks like as if you were Godzilla stomping through the streets. Categorically, what is that? (The 3D maps are "computer generated," but using photography.) It's not 360 photography.

The "blending" of virtual and augmented reality is made possible by two facts. First, all you need is a camera lashed to VR goggles in order to stream "reality" into a virtual reality scenario. Second, computers can augment, modify, tweak, change and distort video in real time to any degree desired by programmers. This leaves us word people confused about what to call something. "Video" and "computer generated" exist on a smooth spectrum. It's not one or the other.

This will be especially confusing for the public later this year, because it all goes mainstream with the introduction of the iPhone 8 (or whatever Apple will call it) and iOS 11, both of which are expected to hit the market within a month or two.

The Apple App Store will be flooded with apps that will not only do VR, AR, MR, 360 video and heads-up display content (when the iPhone is inserted into goggles) but that will creatively blend them in unanticipated combinations. Adding more confusion, some of the most advanced platforms, such as Microsoft Hololens, Magic Leap, Meta 2, Atheer AiR and others, will not be capable of doing virtual reality.

Cheap phones inserted into cardboard goggles can do VR and all the rest. But Microsoft's Hololens cannot.

All these labels are still useful for describing most of these new kinds of media and platforms. Individual apps may in fact offer mixed reality or virtual reality exclusively.

Over time we'll come to see these media in a hierarchy, with heads-up displays at the bottom and virtual reality at the top. Heads-up display devices like Google Glass can do only that. But "mixed reality" platforms can do mixed reality, augmented reality and heads-up display. "Virtual reality" platforms (those with cameras attached) can do it all.

Word meanings evolve and shift over time. At first, alternative word use is "incorrect." Then it's acceptable in some circles, but not others. Eventually, if enough people use the formerly wrong usage, it becomes right. This is how language evolves.

A great example is the word "hacker." Originally, the word referred to an "enthusiastic and skilful computer programmer or user." Through widespread misuse, however, the word has come to primarily mean "a person who uses computers to gain unauthorized access to data."

Prescriptivists and purists argue that the old meaning is still primary or exclusive. But it's not. A word's meaning is decided by how a majority of people use it, not by rules, dictionaries or authority.

I suspect that over time the blurring of media will confuse the public into calling VR, AR, MR, 360 video and heads-up display "virtual reality" as the singular umbrella term that covers it all. At the very least, all these media will be called VR if they're experienced through VR-capable equipment.

And if we're going to pick an umbrella term, that's the best one. It's still close enough to describe all these new media. And in fact only VR devices can do it all.

Welcome to the fluid, flexible multimedia world of heads-up display, 360 video, mixed reality, augmented reality and virtual reality.

It's all one world now. It's all one thing. Just call it "virtual reality."

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Why Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality are the same thing - Computerworld

The region’s first virtual reality arcade opens in Salford – and it is epic – Manchester Evening News

Gamers are preparing to descend on Salford as the regions first virtual reality arcade opens.

Based at the University Business Park, SO VR immerses visitors into a world of zombie shoot outs and adventure.

Using the latest HTC Vive headsets the arcade has two gaming stations which can be booked per hour by groups of four.

The futuristic space is the brainchild of founder and lifelong gamer Chris Holland.

He said: Greater Manchester is up and coming for tech and gaming, so naturally it is the best place to launch something like this.

I have always wanted my own business but it was more about starting something at the right time in the right space. Virtual reality (VR) is the next big disrupter in every single sector so we are ahead of the curve.

The 26-year-old, who studied business management and economics at Nottingham Trent University, came up with the concept in April.

By July he had received 15,000 backing from a government loan start-up scheme and had found his first premises.

Asked what inspired him he says: One of my earliest memories is of my dad coming back from India and sitting down together to play GoldenEye or Mario Kart on the Nintendo.

"Everyone loves the nostalgia of old games but VR brings it to life. You can put as many graphics as you like into a game but once you put the player inside its a whole different experience.

SO VR has a choice of 21 games from slicing flying watermelons in Fruit Ninja to surviving a zombie apocalypse in Arizona Sunshine.

Each group gets a trained VR guide who will help navigate them through the games to get the best experience.

There are currently two headset stations but this is likely to extend to four with a partition in the room.

Holland is also keen to create a community feel with a lounging area before you start gaming and expanding to offer a bar with snacks.

He has big plans for growing the business as he hopes extra investment will allow a second more developer-focused site in Manchester city centre.

Here game developers will be able to test out their latest title on gamers and fix any issues.

He also is looking to franchise SO VR further down the line so it can go nationwide. I am thinking big he tells me. This isnt just a one off.

Weekdays cost 32 per hour for a group of four - equalling 8 each. This goes to 40 on the weekend.

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The region's first virtual reality arcade opens in Salford - and it is epic - Manchester Evening News

Investors bet big on AI for health diagnostics – VentureBeat

Were seeing a new wave of venture investments in healthtech companies especially those with strong artifical intelligence and machine learning components. Led by some of the worlds largest biopharma companies and tech-focused venture capitalists, these investments are backing efforts to speed drug discovery, improve tests and treatments, and further medical research. For now, most of the investment is focused in the diagnostics/tools (Dx/Tools) sector.A Silicon Valley Bank analysis last month found that 44 venture-backed deals raised $2.2 billion between 2015 and the first half of 2017 for Dx/Tools companies that use AI/ML as part of their underlying technology.

The investors are increasingly diverse:

For our analysis, SVB segmented Dx/Tools into three subsectors: Dx Tests (yes/no test results), Dx/Tools Analytics (actionable data analytics to help direct treatment), and R&D Tools (research equipment and services for biopharma and academia). These deals include multi-$100 million financings for three companies: GRAIL, Guardant Health, and Human Longevity.

Tech-focused and healthcare investors view investments in this new subsector through different lenses.

Tech investors tend to see their AI/ML investments in Dx/Tools as a vehicle for tackling big data in the healthcare arena. When that complex problem is solved, they expect the market will be huge as will the exit opportunities. Thus, tech investors are making early-stage bets. For example, they are banding together in AI/ML platform companies like Atomwise, Cofactor Genomics, Color Genomics, Gingko Bioworks, and Neurotrack.

Healthcare investors typically consider regulatory pathway, reimbursement, revenue ramp, and the acquirer landscape as they evaluate investments. While these investors see much promise in AI/ML technologies, so far they have largely remained on the sidelines. AI/ML represents a new paradigm in healthcare company formation, and these early-stage companies are just beginning to address approval and commercialization, and thus are often considered too early for healthcare investors.

Looking ahead, collaboration among tech and healthcare investors seems natural: It would create an enhanced team to take advantage of technology expertise and experience in healthcare market approval and adoption. To date, there have been limited collaborations, such as Guardant Health.

Valuation remains one of the sticking points. Anecdotally, there are numerous examples of healthcare investors being outbid by tech investors. But as early-stage companies mature, we expect to see more activity by traditional healthcare venture investors.

At this stage, there are several key questions that have yet to be answered:

There will be some big wins in this space, but the next financing rounds will serve as a key indicator of investor confidence. Well likely see an investor mix led by new tech investors and biopharma corporate venture arms. And we also expect large tech companies to invest as they continue to expand their healthcare footprint. Again, how big a role healthcare venture investors will play is uncertain.

On the acquisition side, big biopharma will continue to target AI/ML companies. And large tech companies looking to make further inroads into healthcare (such as Google, Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, and Dell) will not likely pass up opportunities to take a stake in this emerging healthcare sector.

As machine learning and artificial intelligence are rapidly commercialized for healthcare applications, we expect healthcare investing to shift paradigms, leading to new waves of investors and opportunities for promising companies.

Jonathan Norris is Managing Director at Silicon Valley Bank.

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Investors bet big on AI for health diagnostics - VentureBeat

AI is Here To Stay and No, It Won’t Take Away Your Job – Entrepreneur

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There are many examples of artificial intelligence technology that are used in our daily lives. Each example shows us how this technology is becoming important to solve our problems. But what concerns many tech leaders is that how humans and robots working together will radically change the way that we react to some of our greatest problems.

At RISE 2017 in Hong Kong, Ritu Marya, editor-in-chief, Franchise India moderated a panel discussion chaired by Michael Kaiser, Executive Director, National Cyber Security Alliance, Elisabeth Hendrickson, VP Engineering, Big Data at Pivotal Software and Adam Burden, Group Technology Office, Accenture.

The discussion addressed certain critical theories on how to see the world which is probably going to see robots and humans working together.

AI Will Make Humans Super Rather Than Being a Super Human

We spend a lot of time thinking about the role of AI in the future because we do business advisory services for clients and strategic thinking about where the businesses are heading? I think there is one fundamental guiding principle that we have that the impact of automation and artificial intelligence is more about making humans super rather than being the super human, said Burden adding that AI enabling people on amplifying their experience is right way to look at it

He feels a lot of companies looking at artificial intelligence and automation as a means of labour savings is a short term view.

Elaborating the role of AI Burden shared an example of his work in the insurance industry where he is implementing AI to save time.

We have trained the AI systems so that onecan add the site of the accident and add the pictures of the vehicle to automatically get the claim against the damage. Your time gets saved in this process and overall the experience and profitability also gets better, he said.

Talking about countries quickly adopting robotic automation in their daily lives, Burden shared that United States and China will use AI technology to the fullest to lower down the increase of labour population. India having an increasing population presents some different set of challenges but AI technology will help in solving those challenges too.

The Integrity Of That Data Becomes Credible

With too much data floating around, cybersecurity is an area where AI can truly show its capability. Kaiser believes AI technology is going to transform cyber security.

The new concept thats been most talked about now a days is the data thats been flowing everywhere. Very few of our systems are self-contained. Take smart city as an example where you have cars moving in the city that must get information from the municipality about traffic flows, accident or other kind of things. That data is collected somewhere and needs to go to the car. When you start looking at the interdependence of that data, the integrity of that data becomes credible, explained Kaiser.

He further suggested that every smart city should have a safe platform where the car knows that what information its getting is true and real.

Robots are doing more number of jobs that once were done by humans. Elisabeth, however, thinks that a robot will only give an ability to make human jobs better and easier by automating pieces that are time-consuming.

We dont talk about howa large number of people dont need help in scheduling because Google Calendar helps us to do that. So when you think about your job, you are not going to get replaced but your job will get easier which is going to free you up to focus on more creative aspects of it, she said.

A self confessed Bollywood Lover, Travel junkie and Food Evangelist.I like travelling and I believe it is very important to take ones mind off the daily monotony .

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AI is Here To Stay and No, It Won't Take Away Your Job - Entrepreneur

Week In Geek Podcast: Microsoft bets its future on AI, and scientists discover the cause of allergies – GeekWire

Satya Nadella speaking at Microsoft Ignite 2016. (GeekWire Photo / Kevin Lisota)

There was a grab bag of interesting headlines this week, but well start with a big change at one of the most recognized tech companies in the world: Microsoft.

The company released its 10-K this week, a government-required filing that lays out its strategy and finances for the year. Thenovella of documents would put some people straight to sleep, but for those willing to dig in, its a fascinating glimpse into the tech giants inner workings.

The big takeaway this year: Microsoft changed its vision statement, officially putting its corporate focus on artificial intelligence and the intelligent cloud instead of mobile technology.

GeekWire editor Todd Bishop says the change has been a long time coming, but its still a big moment for the company. We discuss what the change says about Microsoft and the state of AI in the technology world on this episode of the Week In Geek.

We also learn about a breakthrough in fighting allergies: A team of scientists at Seattles Benaroya Research Institute has discovered a cell thats behind allergic reactions.

The discovery could change how we treat and even prevent allergies, from the life-threatening anaphylactic shock to seasonal sniffles.

Also this week, the Trump administration unveiled its newest immigration proposal and prompted an outcry from thetech community. The proposal would drastically cut the number of legal immigrants allowed into the country, something that tech and business leaders, along with many legislators, oppose.

And finally, we take a glimpse inside Audis Silvercar rental service that opened this week at the Seattle Tacoma International Airport. The tech-focused service is looking to take the hassle out of renting a car while traveling, and GeekWires Taylor Soper tested it out first hand.

On the Random Chanel this week: Bill Gates is investing in a veggie burger; The Seattle Sounders could be getting a new logo on their jerseys; andthe Onion pokes some fun at Jeff Bezos with satirical advice for startups.

Listen to the show above or download it as an MP3. Dont forget to subscribeinApple Podcasts,Stitcher,Google Play, or wherever you listen to podcasts.

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Week In Geek Podcast: Microsoft bets its future on AI, and scientists discover the cause of allergies - GeekWire

The latest challenge to Google’s AI dominance comes from an unlikely place — Firefox – CNBC

Mozilla, the company behind the Firefox internet browser, has begun testing a feature that lets you enter a search query using your voice instead of typing it in. The move could help Mozilla's efforts to make Firefox more competitive with Google Chrome.

If you're using Firefox in English on Mac, Windows or Linux, you can turn on the experimental "Voice Fill" feature and then use it on Google, Yahoo and DuckDuckGo. Support for other websites will come later.

Alphabet's Google offers speech recognition on its search engine when accessed through Chrome on desktop -- it became available in 2013 -- and Yahoo, Microsoft's Bing and Google all let you run search queries with your voice on mobile devices. But searching with your voice on Google while using Firefox on the desktop, for example, has historically been impossible. Now Mozilla wants to make its desktop browser more competitive.

The Voice Fill feature comes a few weeks after Mozilla announced the Common Voice Project that allows people to "donate" recordings of them saying various things in order to build up "an open-source voice recognition engine" that anyone will be able to use. Mozilla will use recordings from Voice Fill and the Common Voice Project in order to make the speech recognition more accurate, speech engineer Andre Natal told CNBC in an interview.

Mozilla's latest efforts follow Facebook's push into speech recognition. And speech technology has become hotter thanks to the rise of "smart" speakers like the Amazon Alexa, the Google Home, and the Apple HomePod. Harman Kardon is now building a speaker that will let people interact with Microsoft's Cortana assistant.

But these big technology companies have collected considerable amounts of proprietary voice data. So while they zig, Mozilla will zag. Mozilla will release to the public its voice snippets from the Common Voice Project later this year. The speech recognition models will be free for others to use as well, and eventually there will be a service for developers to weave into their own apps, Natal said.

"There's no option for both users and developers to use -- something that is both concerned about your privacy and also affordable," Natal said.

That said, Mozilla is following along with the rest of the tech crowd in the sense that the underlying system -- a fork of the Kaldi open-source software -- employs artificial neural networks, a decades-old but currently trendy architecture for training machines to do things like recognize the words that people say.

Mozilla initially explored incorporating speech recognition into the assistant for its Firefox OS for phones, but in 2016 it shifted the OS focus to connected devices, and earlier this year Mozilla closed up the connected devices group altogether.

Today Mozilla has five people working on speech research and a total of about 30 people working on speech technology overall, Natal said. Eventually the team wants to make the technology work in languages other than English.

Mozilla introduced the browser that became Firefox back in 2002. Over the years the nonprofit Mozilla Foundation has received financial support from Google and Yahoo. Mozilla CEO Chris Beard is currently focused on trying to get people to care about the company again, as CNET's Stephen Shankland reported this week. Recent moves include the launch of the Firefox Focus mobile browser and the acquisition of read-it-later app Pocket.

But while Firefox could have roughly 300 million monthly active users, Chrome has more than 1 billion.

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The latest challenge to Google's AI dominance comes from an unlikely place -- Firefox - CNBC

Orange, Teal And Now Gold: Jason Taylor A Step Closer To Football Immortality – CBS Miami

August 4, 2017 11:41 PM

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CANTON, OH (CBSMiami) Its a big weekend for former Dolphin great Jason Taylor as hes inducted Saturday into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Friday night, Taylor literally got the look of a Hall of Famer.

Fans mobbed him as he arrived for the Gold Jacket Dinner.

A parade of Hall of Famers fanned out during the dinner, wearing their gold jackets.

As Taylor was introduced, he paused to hug his mom and kiss his daughter.

Then it was the wow moment as Taylor got a specially fitted jacket of his own.

Earlier in the day, Taylor reflected on his path to footballs most elite fraternity.

I got in that plane this morning to fly up her and it hit me really hard. Its real and its exciting, Taylor told CBS4s Jim Berry Thursday after arriving in Canton.

Im just happy that they, the Hall of Fame, lowered their standards for this guy here, Hall of Fame linebacker Lawrence Taylor joked with Taylor.

Taylor played for 15 years, mostly with the Miami Dolphins, and ranks among the greatest defensive playmakers in league history. No player recovered more fumbles or scored more touchdowns on fumble returns, and no lineman scored more on interception returns.

I didnt think I would be a first-ballot guy, Taylor says. I thought the lack of a Super Bowl, the lack of playoff success, would come back to bite me.

Taylor played from 1997 to 2011, and aside from one season each with the Redskins and Jets, he was with the Dolphins, playing for seven coaches who combined to win three postseason games none after 2000.

Taylor was a 36-year-old rush linebacker with the 2010 Jets when they lost to the Steelers 13-6 in the AFC championship game. Thats the closest he came to a Super Bowl.

I still regret I was never able to play in one or win one, he says. Youre in this game to win championships, you know? But I didnt earn it. We just didnt earn it. We had some pretty good teams a few years; it wasnt meant to be. It stinks, but it wasnt meant to be.

The other inductees are kicker Morten Andersen; running back Terrell Davis; safety Kenny Easley; owner, president and general manager Jerry Jones; running back LaDainian Tomlinson; and quarterback Kurt Warner.

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Orange, Teal And Now Gold: Jason Taylor A Step Closer To Football Immortality - CBS Miami

CLINICAL EFFICACY OF DIETARY MANIPULATION AS COMPLEMENTARY AND ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE … – UroToday

(Objectives) We examined the clinical efficacy of dietary manipulation (DM) for female patients with interstitial cystitis (IC) in stable condition who were followed in our hospital. (Patients and methods) This study included 20 female patients with IC in rather stable condition who were followed at our hospital. In cooperation with the nutrition control team, we created a basic IC diet menu for 1 month (total daily calories, 1,500 kcal; protein, 65 g; fat, 40 g; carbohydrate, 220 g; water, 1,000 ml; salt, 7 g). Data regarding daily food intake and food-related symptoms were collected by detailed interview of each patient conducted by the doctors, nurses, and nutritionists at our hospital. In accordance with the abovementioned nutrition control, we set meal menu to control IC symptoms and advised the patients to reduce the intake of specific food items to the maximum possible extent.The following food items were removed from or restricted in the diet of patients: tomatoes, tomato products, soy, tofu product (seasoning was acceptable), spices (pepper, curry powder, mustard, horseradish, etc.), excessive potassium, citrus, high-acidity-inducing substances (caffeine, carbonate, and citric acid), etc. We evaluated the following factors to determine the efficacy of this diet menu 3 months after the start of the intervention: O'Leary-Sant symptom index (OSSI), O'Leary-Sant problem index (OSPI), urgency visual analogue scale (UVAS) score, (0, no urgency; 10, severe urgency), bladder or pelvic pain VAS (PVAS) score, (0, no pain; 10, worst possible pain), and numerical patient-reported quality of life (QOL) index (0, highly satisfied; 6, highly dissatisfied). (Results) OSSI and OSPI improved from 11.7 to 10.1 (p<0.0001), and from 10.7 to 8.8 (p=0.01), respectively. The UVAS score significantly reduced from 6.4 to 4.8, and the PVAS score significantly improved from 6.5 to 4.8 (p<0.0001). The patient-reported QOL index significantly improved from 5.1 to 3.9 (p<0.0001). (Conclusion) Although repeated notes were taken and patients who were followed up for a long term were consulted on the meal, as appropriate, at the time of visit, DM was found to alleviate the symptoms of IC. DM as a systematic treatment modality for IC should be attempted more aggressively because of its non-invasiveness, without alterations to the other IC treatments.

Nihon Hinyokika Gakkai zasshi. The japanese journal of urology. 2016 Jan [Epub]

Hitoshi Oh-Oka

Department of Urology, National Hospital Organization, Kobe Medical Center.

PubMed http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28740049

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CLINICAL EFFICACY OF DIETARY MANIPULATION AS COMPLEMENTARY AND ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE ... - UroToday

Podcast Ep. 175: Alternative Medicine Isn’t Medicine – Patheos (blog)

In our latest podcast, Jessica and I discussed the past week in politics and atheism. (We now have timestamps for each story!)

We discussed:

BYU-Idaho asked a student why she dropped out so she told them the truth. (0:42)

The Mayor of Knoxville (TN) finally admitted a Bible sign hanging in the police department was illegal. (5:30)

The White House Bible Study is bad enough, but the instructor is worse. (13:42)

Donald Trumps Religious Right lawyer cant stop lying for him. (17:56)

An NFL player thinks dinosaurs arent real and fossils are fake. (23:23)

The Activist Mommy has a lot of advice on how to beat your children properly. (26:33)

Bastyr University, a naturopathic school, says a former student is defaming them online. She says shes just sharing what she learned there. (37:24)

Atheists are asking the Supreme Court to rule on prayers at school board meetings. (52:11)

Rod Dreher is frustrated by Christians who support Trump, but hes part of the problem. (59:50)

Ark Encounter has a new silly excuse for why attendance is low. (1:06:17)

Wed love to hear your thoughts on the podcast. If you have any suggestions for people we should chat with, please leave them in the comments, too.

You can subscribe to the podcast on iTunes or Google Play, stream all the episodes on SoundCloud or Stitcher, or just listen to the whole thing below. Our RSS feed is here. And if you like what youre hearing, please consider supporting this site on Patreon and leaving us a positive rating!

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Podcast Ep. 175: Alternative Medicine Isn't Medicine - Patheos (blog)

Like Your Doctor? You’re Part of a Huge Club – Madison.com

Physicians might be more appreciated than they think. A Pew Research Center survey found that63% of American adults had seen a healthcare provider in the previous year for an illness or medical condition. Of those, 87% thought that the provider listened carefully to their symptoms and concerns.

Nearly as many patients (84%) felt their doctor "really cared about their health and well-being." Four our of five Americans thought they received all the information they needed from their healthcare provider.

Those findings indicate that around 217 million American adults had positive experiences with their physicians. If you like you're doctor, you're part of a huge club. And if you're a doctor, congratulations -- it's highly likely that your patients think you're doing a good job.

Image source: Getty Images.

What makes the Pew survey results especially interesting is how they show patients have a very different perspective than physicians have.

A survey published in theArchives of Internal Medicineback in 2012 reported that physicians in the U.S. experience burnout more than any other profession. In 2015, a Medscape survey found that, despite making large salaries, nearly half of all U.S. doctors said they had experienced "loss of enthusiasm for work, feelings of cynicism, and a low sense of personal accomplishment." The findings from the Pew survey suggest that this burnout isn't having too great of a negative impact on physicians' relationships with their patients.

The top reason for frustration for physicians in the Medscape survey was "too many bureaucratic tasks." This probably is a reason why 23% of patients in the Pew survey reported that they "felt rushed by their healthcare provider." Still, though, many more patients didn't feel rushed than did.

Although most Americans appear to like their doctors, many are also taking other approaches for treatment of illnesses. The Pew survey found that nearly half of all Americans have tried alternative medicine outside of conventional medical care. Alternative medicine includesacupuncture, chiropractic, energy therapies, herbal dietary supplements, and other therapies that physicians typically wouldn't use for treatment. It should be noted, however, that only 20% of Americans used alternative medicine instead of traditional medical treatment, with others using alternative medicine in addition to traditional medical treatment.

Younger Americans appear to be more likely to try alternative treatments. The Pew survey found that 51% of U.S. adults between the ages of 18 and 29 had used alternative treatments, while only 38% of adults age 65 or over had done so.

Image source: Getty Images.

Americans are also likely to do their own research on medical conditions. Just 30% of respondents in the Pew survey rely solely on what their doctor tells them. Roughly 36% do some research of their own to learn more about the treatment recommended by their healthcare providers. Another 21% check for other treatment options. Around 9% of Americans research potential side effects.

With so many Americans having positive experiences with their healthcare providers, you might expect they'd think overall health in the country was improving. But they don't.

The Pew Research Center survey found that 48% of American adults think that the health of children is worse than it was 20 years ago, with 20% thinking it's about the same. Only 31% think the health of U.S. children has gotten better over the last two decades.

Around 42% of the survey respondents felt that the health of U.S. adults was worse than it was 20 years ago. Roughly 24% thought adult health was about the same as two decades ago, with 33% viewing the health of adult Americans as better than it was in the past.

Why such pessimism? A couple of other findings in the Pew survey could point to the answer. Nearly all (95%) of Americans said that getting enough physical exercise was important to improving health. However, a whopping 79% of Americans think they should be exercising more.

Perhaps the main message from the Pew survey is that most Americans could have the following conversation with their primary physician: "I like you a lot, doc, even though I'm not as healthy as I should be. It's not you... it's me."

The $16,122 Social Security bonus most retirees completely overlook

If you're like most Americans, you're a few years (or more) behind on your retirement savings. But a handful of little-known "Social Security secrets" could help ensure a boost in your retirement income. For example: one easy trick could pay you as much as $16,122 more... each year! Once you learn how to maximize your Social Security benefits, we think you could retire confidently with the peace of mind we're all after.Simply click here to discover how to learn more about these strategies.

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Like Your Doctor? You're Part of a Huge Club - Madison.com

Friday Night Inc subsidiary Alternative Medicine Association … – Proactive Investors UK

Friday Night Inc () said its subsidiary, Alternative Medicine Association (AMA) is to start manufacturing and distributing products under the well-known Krypted vaping brand.

With most popular cannabis brands now wanting a presence in the critical Las Vegas market, AMA is attracting new brand-expansion conversations daily, and Krypted is the fourth brand to be added to Nevada-focused AMA's exclusive manufacturing and distribution network.

The Krypted team will be in Las Vegas next week for the kick-off meeting and to prepare for the initial production run, Friday Night revealed.

AMA has already obtained state approval for their logo and product names and the first sales should occur by 15 September.

Terms include making AMA the exclusive manufacturer & distributor in Nevada for an initial term of three years, renewable annually after that, with a 15% production royalty.

Krypted, a big name in the California vaping scene, is providing AMA with all packaging and marketing support.

Intriguingly, Friday Night said AMA would launch an apparel and merchandise brand on 15 August, so if you've ever wanted to wear a pair of AMA-branded socks, now's your chance.

AMA said it has recruited an industry lifestyle branding and marketing veteran to rebrand and establish a comprehensive lifestyle approach that will expand and maximize AMA's presence within the Vegas market.

Friday Night sees AMA as a lifestyle and a global brand that will transcend into multiple business verticals that support AMA's core business.

Meanwhile, Friday Night revealed that demand for recreational cannabis continues to increase.

We look forward to our next fiscal year that began on August 1st, 2017, and the new challenges and rewards this year will bring us. With everything going on, we are confident that we will continue to outperform," said Mark Zobrist, the chief executive of AMA.

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Friday Night Inc subsidiary Alternative Medicine Association ... - Proactive Investors UK

5 New Beauty Supplements That Will Help You Look and Feel Better – Vogue.com

Its 2017and while kombucha, bone broth , and medicinal mushroom tonics are currently as common as a morning latte, theres one throwback wellness staple thats making a cool comeback. A new wave of nutritional beauty supplements is taking the market by storm, targeting skin health, hair sheen, and even eye strength. And although they may rely on science-backed ingredients and high-quality extracts, they look nothing like their clinical predecessors. Instead, they arrive in sleek glossy packs that are more likely to be stocked at a discerning beauty boutiquewhere you can shop them alongside your favorite lipsticks or lash-volumizing mascarasthan the local health food store.

Everyone wants to look better faster, says New York City nutritionist Robin Barrie Kaiden, M.S., R.D. of the desire to pop a single pill that can fast-track results. And while she cautions that there is no quick fixsupplements should be part of a 360 degree approach to a healthy diet and lifestyle, and taken under the supervision of a doctorthere are research-tested ingredients that may contribute to the big picture. Here, five of our favorite supplement blends for the months ahead.

THE AGE-DEFYING SKIN FIX German molecular scientist and celebrity dermatologist Barbara Sturms Skin Food is designed specifically to combat the visible signs of skin aging, thanks to one hero ingredient. Purslane, a superfood compound developed in collaboration with doctors at the University of Miami, helps fight inflammation while activating the bodys own youth enzymes. Additional ingredients like glucosamine (which boosts hyaluronic acid production), Japanese Knotweed Root Extract (which is packed with anti-aging Resveratrol), and high-quality antioxidants round out the complex, which promotes the skins ability to maintain its best elasticity, texture and tone.

THE STRESS-BUSTING BLEND Gwyneth Paltrows buzzy line of Goop vitamins, formulated in conjunction with Clean Program founder Dr. Alejandro Junger, have cheeky names. But the ingredients in the wellness brands Why Am I So Effing Tired? formula are no joke. The mix aims to combat adrenal fatigue, increase energy levels, and diminish stress with a combination of Vitamin B, Omega 3s (derived from anchovy, sardine, and mackerel) a Viviscal nd ancient Ayurvedic herbs like bacopa, amla, and holy basil.

THE SCREEN-VISION SAVER Surfing Net-A-Porter, scheduling catch-up time with friends, and ordering dinner in a matter of minutes from your Smartphone makes for efficient multi-tasking, but it may also contribute to screen-strained vision. With the average person spending up to ten hours a day in front of a screen, opthamologists have seen a surge of complaints ranging from blurred vision to light sensitivity. In an effort to combat the damaging free radicals that lead to macular degeneration, Occugards Blutein Protection supplement combines antioxidants like lutein, which helps to filter high-energy blue light, and vitamin A to boost allover eye health. Kaiden also suggests clients turn off electronics an hour before bedtime to let the eyes rest from a day of technological stress.

THE GOOD HAIR DAY GUARANTEE The hair growth supplement Viviscal is as common backstage as lash-plumping mascara these days, thanks to legions of supermodel testimonials. Now, celebrity hairstylist Jen Atkin , whose clients include Bella Hadid and Kim Kardashian West, is launching a Hollywood-bound supplement for dry, brittle, or thinning hair. Ouais Dry Hair pack promotes shine, hydration, and prevents breakage with a mix of vitamin E, amino acids, and biotin. Arriving in a compact silver foil sheet, they're sure to fit into even the tiniest of It-Girl clutches.

THE NEW SLEEPING PILL While there are a few dietary modifications that may help you get a good nights rest , Perricone MDs Sleep Booster aims to distill sleep maximizing vitamins into a single pill. Magnesium and melatonin can promote relaxation, explains Kaiden of the supplement's key ingredients. Also in each little ampoule: Extracts of ashwagandha, an adaptogen that has shown promise in helping the body cope with anxiety.

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5 New Beauty Supplements That Will Help You Look and Feel Better - Vogue.com

Haqqani: – Midland Daily News

Dr. Omar P. Haqqani

Dr. Omar P. Haqqani

Cardiovascular disease continues to be responsible for more deaths in the United States than any other disease. As physicians, we use medications to lower cholesterol and blood pressure, to control the workload of the heart and to increase blood and oxygen flow.

In some cases, we also use surgical procedures to address life-threatening cardiovascular conditions. But we are often asked by our patients if vitamin and mineral supplements could help in managing their condition or in generally improving their cardiovascular health.

This is a viable question, particularly since supplement labels make some very dramatic claims. While some research shows that supplements may help lower cholesterol or blood pressure, it remains unclear if they can prevent or improve cardiovascular disease. It's important for patients to understand the science of supplements and to have realistic expectations about how they might impact cardiovascular health.

Popular supplements

There is a wide variety of supplements that claim cardiovascular benefits. Some of the most popular and the ones we are asked about most include:

Fish oil, garlic -- attributed to preventing plaque build-up in arteries, lowering blood pressure and increasing "good" cholesterol.

Antioxidants -- credited for repairing cell damage caused by free radicals, including the cells in our hearts and lungs.

Vitamin D, B vitamins -- said to be helpful in lowering the risk of cardiovascular disease and heart disease.

Fiber -- found to reduce the amount of cholesterol your body absorbs from food.

Probiotics -- thought to lower blood pressure and cholesterol levels.

It is true that all of these can positively impact cardiovascular health, but the ingredients that do the work are all found in food, and recommended daily levels can usually be maintained by simply eating properly.

Eating fish each week and cooking with garlic or garlic oil can help with plaque build-up and high cholesterol. Antioxidants can be found in berries, dark chocolate and dark green vegetables. Dairy products, egg yolks and whole grain cereals contain vitamins D and B which can lower risk of heart disease. And fiber and probiotics that help lower blood pressure are found in vegetables, fruits, beans and grains. Isolating these important nutrients in pill form rather than ingesting them through food is not advisable.

Food first

Food contains hundreds of ingredients that, together, promote good cardiovascular health. Because there is no supplement that can adequately replace all the benefits of food, it is best to use food as your primary source of nutrition, then supplement any gaps if necessary.

Assess your overall eating habits to determine if you can make small dietary changes that would allow you to avoid supplements. If there are one or two food groups you dislike, learn about the key nutrients in them and then choose a supplement to meet only those needs. If you eat a large amount of fast food and frequently drink low-nutrition drinks such as colas or tea, you should consider making significant overall changes in your diet before adding supplements.

Supplement safety

Patients who have been diagnosed with cardiovascular disease should talk to their physicians prior to using any supplement, even a simple multivitamin. Certain supplements may actually be harmful to these patients since they can reduce the effectiveness of medications prescribed for heart failure, coronary artery disease or high cholesterol. In some instances, supplements such as L-carnitine and lecithin can even contribute to plaque buildup in the arteries of certain people.

If you are under the care of a physician for any cardiovascular condition, you must follow your doctor's advice and be certain to discuss the effect of any supplement you consider. If you do not suffer from a cardiovascular condition, seek advice from your family physician or a nutritionist who can help you make an informed choice.

The key to outstanding cardiovascular health is not consuming isolated nutrients in the form of a pill but, rather, eating more foods that contain all the nutrients our bodies need.

Dr. Omar P. Haqqani is the chief of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery at Vascular Health Clinics in Midland.

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Haqqani: - Midland Daily News