Ernesto Kruger: Ecuadorian Entrepreneur and Visionary, Seeks Technology Experts in the United States – Yahoo Finance

MIAMI, FL --News Direct-- Kruger

Ernesto Kruger traveled to the United States to exchange impressions about the scenario that companies are going through and the need to rescue talents in the world of technology.

In the Digital evolution era, companies face two main problems: understanding what the digital transformation consists of and being able to access specialized talent to carry out the technological changes that will allow them to achieve this progress, said Kruger.

The solution to these problems is the mission of Kruger Corporation, a technology multinational with 29 years in the market and a presence in 12 countries around the world, which continues its internationalization and is now landing in the United States.

The pandemic favored traditional companies that converted and used technology. Those that innovated grew and those that refuse definitely tend to disappear, Ernesto emphasizes. There are large companies that need an automation process, we have talked to companies all over the United States and we know there is an opportunity to serve the American market with the best talent, Hispanic talent.

Faced with the unsatisfied demand for specialized talent in Information Technology, Ernesto Kruger will recruit sophisticated professionals in the United States to join the global market through Kruger Corporation. Today he opens a new home, a window of valuable career opportunities for Hispanic professionals, especially the young.

We recruit them here to start working with the Kruger team, the bilingual talent working with Hispanic talent. Talent which is recruited to develop in programming language topics, blockchain, Java, and we use partnerships with large manufacturers like Google and Amazon, he adds.

The search for talent is done through social networks, which is part of Krugers culture, whose purpose is to boost lives, especially for young people who today are looking for flexible or remote work.

Kruger Corporation is constantly expanding, with clients who need a large pool of talent. They dont need a university degree because in nine months they are able to train professionals who can handle the necessary tools and software. The desire to learn and experience come together to create a professional in the technological area.

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This Latino entrepreneur knew how to recognize the needs of the market and created a successful product based on Hispanic talent. I started with a beeper and a briefcase, my secretary and my office. Nothing is impossible, the impossible just takes a little longer. Thats why I like to encourage younger people to be part of the changes and processes in any company in the world, says Krueger.

Today we are a family of more than 400 people and with a socially responsible approach, focused on transforming education. We created a startup incubator, and we help young people to grow with very successful cases such as the technology of environmental services. Latin American talent, with desire, can specialize and turn these young developers into blockchain experts, for example, Ernesto tells us while emphasizing that supporting young Latinos is one of his goals.

One of the companys values is sustainability and care for the environment since the application of blockchain makes it possible to measure the carbon footprint associated with production and thus compensate for it. Improving peoples economy is key, but also avoiding climate damage. Technology can and must help nature, concludes Krueger, because without a planet we will have nothing.

Kruger Corp.

analucalderon@krugercorp.com

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Robots fight and drones take flight at VITs graVITas technology fest – The Hindu

The three-day event, a regular fixture at the institute since 2008, will host 140 events with more than 13,000 students participating from colleges and universities across the country

The three-day event, a regular fixture at the institute since 2008, will host 140 events with more than 13,000 students participating from colleges and universities across the country

The highlight of Vellore Institute of Technologys (VIT) three-day technological fest graVITas was the robot fight being held at the open stadium in its Vellore campus on Saturday.

The creativity and ingenuity of students from various streams of engineering, like mechanical, electronics and electrical and communication, were on display at the event, which has become a regular fixture at VIT since 2008.

VIT vice-president G.V. Selvam witnessed Saturdays events. Developing a robot is not childs play. It takes at least three years of joint effort from like-minded teammates to make it work, said Adwyck Gupta, a third-year EEE student from the institution.

The participants of the robot fight are divided into two categories based on weight 15 kg and 60 kg and operated remotely by the students. The damaged robot can be repaired in 20 minutes to fight again but cannot be replaced with a new one. At the graVITas, 22 teams were enrolled to clash in 19 matches to become the champion. The winning robot was decided based on three criteria aggression, control and damage.

Events such as this enable engineering students apply what they have learned and gain some experience.

Another attraction at graVITas was the drone obstacle course. Participants must navigate their drones through a series of obstacles, like archways and poles, for a distance of around 200 m. The fastest drone to clear the course is declared the winner. A total of 32 teams participated in the event.

During the three-day festival, 140 events will be held with more than 13,000 students from various colleges and deemed universities from across the country participating.

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Robots fight and drones take flight at VITs graVITas technology fest - The Hindu

Connecting technology and society – The Hindu

What students who want to build a career in technology that has a social impact should know

What students who want to build a career in technology that has a social impact should know

The Oxford dictionary defines technology as the branch of knowledge dealing with Engineering or Applied Sciences but it makes no reference to society. So, why bother building a career in technology that impacts society? For an answer, it is worth recalling late historian Marvin Kranzbergs laws of technology.

One states that all history is relevant, but the history of technology is the most relevant. Another is technology is a very human activity and so is the history of technology. Between them, they make clear that human history can be understood by studying technological change, and technology is central to our activities as a human race. Thus, attempting to distinguish between technology and society is to seek a non-existent distinction.

If there is no distinction between technology and society i.e, if technology is not outside of society, how is the reference to impact meaningful? Here again, two other laws offer insights. One states that technology is neither good nor bad; nor is it neutral. The other is that although technology might be a prime element in many public issues, non-technical factors take precedence in technology-policy decisions. These suggest that even if technological discoveries and inventions are conceived by knowledge of Engineering or Applied Sciences, there are other influences on technological trajectories and outcomes. In other words, to build a socially impactful technological career, a sound grasp of Engineering and Applied Sciences is only the necessary condition. It is also important to understand three other aspects.

First, when seeking social impact, it is crucial to ask who in society?. There are various social groups, marked by differences in affluence, age, gender, literacy, and physical disability, and their expectations of technology are hardly identical. Each ones clout to influence technologies and their impact is also far from equal. For instance, firms with deep pockets, often determine what technologies to invest in and to adopt. Similarly, governments use regulation to determine the ease of access to technologies and their use. The growth of the Indian software industry is a case in point. Despite being the worlds largest exporter of software services, little of the expertise was targeted at the less lucrative local markets. It was not until the government policies extended incentives that firms began to consider inclusive innovation and technologies for the bottom of the pyramid.

Second, a technology rarely is effective on its own; rather, its impact is contingent on complementary technologies and social conditions. Therefore, technologists seeking social impact must understand how the complements are faring. For instance, although the study of Artificial Intelligence (AI) originated in the 1950s, it has become the rage only in the past decade as increasingly powerful and affordable hardware has become available. Further, if AI now powers digital platforms such as Uber or Swiggy, it is only because smartphones have become ubiquitous among last-mile gig workers who deliver the services. But combining both technologies to deliver low-cost services is possible, unfortunately, only because high levels of (un)der-employment, in a legal vacuum that affords no regulatory protection, forces workers to accept miserly wages.

Three, any presumption that the pursuit of new or improved technologies to address contemporary social challenges will not create unforeseen challenges is misplaced. Here, gaining a historical perspective is important. to appreciate how the past is littered with technological trajectories that have triggered new challenges, or have led to older challenges resurfacing. For instance, anxieties about cybercrime, privacy risks, and fake news, that accompany the communication revolution unleashed by the Internet are uncannily similar to those that accompanied the spread of the telegraph in the 19th century. Not surprisingly, the telegraph is dubbed the Victorian Internet. Kranzberg could well have said: the more technologies change, the more their impact remains the same.

The author is Professor, Center for Information Technology and Public Policy (CITAPP), International Institute of Information Technology Bangalore.

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Appoints Veteran Media And Technology Executive Carolyn Everson To Its Board Of Directors – The Walt Disney Company – The Walt Disney Company

BURBANK, Calif., September 30, 2022 The Walt Disney Company (NYSE: DIS) today announced that Carolyn Everson, a veteran media and technology executive, will join its Board of Directors, effective November 21. Ms. Everson, 50, a well-respected executive with deep experience in consumer-facing companies, will be included in the Companys slate of director nominees in the proxy statement for Disneys 2023 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.

Ms. Eversons selection follows a lengthy and comprehensive search, and reinforces Disneys commitment to a strong, independent board focused on the long-term performance of the Company. Her appointment has received the support of Third Point LLC, which has entered into a support agreement with Disney following a constructive dialogue.

As part of the agreement, Third Point has agreed to customary standstill, voting and other provisions through Disneys 2024 Annual Meeting of Shareholders. The full agreement between The Walt Disney Company and Third Point LLC will be filed on Form 8-K with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

We are thrilled to welcome Carolyn Everson to the Disney Board, said Susan Arnold, Chairman of the Board, The Walt Disney Company. Carolyns extensive background, including roles at a number of high-profile, complex global companies, brings a welcome and invaluable perspective as we continue to focus on expanding our brand and global reach.

With nearly three decades of experience in senior operating roles at dynamic consumer-facing organizations, Carolyn is a well-respected leader who will bring unique and valuable perspective to our Board, said Bob Chapek, Chief Executive Officer, The Walt Disney Company. Carolyn has had a hand in building a number of world-class digital advertising businesses, and her insights make her a great fit as we continue to position the company for long-term growth.

Mr. Chapek added, We have a productive and collegial relationship with Third Point, with whom we share a deep commitment to continue building on Disneys many successes and increasing shareholder value.

We are pleased with our productive and ongoing dialogue with Bob and Disneys management team, said Daniel S. Loeb, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Investment Officer, Third Point. The expansion of Disneys Board of Directors to include Carolyn Everson will add an important new perspective to an already accomplished group.

I am incredibly excited and honored to join The Walt Disney Companys Board and work alongside the outstanding directors and extraordinarily talented management team, said Ms. Everson. Disney is a beloved brand with an incredible history that brings joy to millions of consumers around the world and one that has meant so much to me and my family over the years. I am fully committed to helping progress Disneys strategic priorities at an exciting time for the business and industry at large.

The Walt Disney Company has a history of delivering significant results powered by world-class storytelling and its unique and highly valuable content-creation and distribution ecosystem. The Company has deftly navigated the COVID-19 pandemic and its aftermath, having delivered significant streaming subscription growth and outstanding performance at its domestic theme parks and resorts.

Disneys independent and experienced Board, which will have 12 members, has benefited from continuous refreshment, and has significant expertise in branded, consumer-facing and technology businesses as well as talent-driven enterprises.

J.P. Morgan Securities LLC served as Disneys financial advisor and Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP served as Disneys legal advisor with respect to the support agreement.

Carolyn Everson Background

Ms. Everson most recently served as President of Instacart. Prior to that role, she was Vice President of the Global Business Group at Facebook, now known as Meta, where she led the global marketing solutions team focused on top strategic accounts and global agencies, as well as media strategy, advertising sales, and account management from 2011-2021.

She has held additional senior leadership roles in media and technology, including as Corporate Vice President of Microsofts Global Advertising Sales and Trade Marketing Teams, and as Chief Operating Officer at Viacom. Prior to Viacom, Ms. Everson worked at Primedia, Walt Disney Imagineering and Accenture Consulting.

Ms. Everson serves on the boards of The Coca-Cola Company, Creative Artists Agency, Villanova University, the Humane Society of the United States and Columbia Medical School. She earned a bachelors degree from Villanova University and has a masters degree in business administration from Harvard Business School.

About The Walt Disney Company

The Walt Disney Company, together with its subsidiaries and affiliates, is a leading diversified international family entertainment and media enterprise that includes Disney Parks, Experiences and Products; Disney Media & Entertainment Distribution; andfourcontent groupsStudios, General Entertainment, Sportsand Internationalfocused on developing and producing content for DTC, theatrical and linear platforms.Disney is a Dow 30 company and had annual revenues of $67.4 billion in its Fiscal Year 2021.

About Third Point LLC

Third Point LLC is an SEC-registered institutional investment manager that employs an event-driven, opportunistic strategy to invest globally across the capital structure and in diversified asset classes to optimize risk-reward through market cycles. Third Point invests in credit, equity, and venture capital, and frequently engages with management and boards of directors to create long-term value. The firm was founded in 1995 by CEO & CIO Daniel S. Loeb.

Forward-Looking Statements

Certain statements in this communication may constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including statements regarding the Companys expectations, beliefs and plans and other statements that are not historical in nature. These statements are made on the basis of managements views and assumptions regarding future events and business performance as of the time the statements are made. Management does not undertake any obligation to update these statements.

Actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied. Such differences may result from actions taken by the Company, including restructuring or strategic initiatives or other business decisions, as well as from developments beyond the Companys control, including: further changes in domestic and global economic conditions; changes in or pressures from competitive conditions and consumer preferences; health concerns and their impact on our businesses and productions; international, regulatory, political, or military developments; technological developments; labor markets and activities; consumer or advertiser demand and behavior; adverse weather conditions or natural disasters; legal or regulatory changes; the advertising market for programming; and timing, availability and performance of content; each such risk includes the current and future impacts of, and is amplified by, COVID-19 and related mitigation efforts. Such developments may further affect entertainment, travel and leisure businesses generally and may, among other things, affect (or further affect, as applicable): our operations, business plans or profitability; our expected benefits of the composition of the Board; demand for our products and services; and the performance of the Companys content.

Additional factors are set forth in the Companys Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended October 2, 2021 under the captions Risk Factors, Managements Discussion and Analysis, and Business, and subsequent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including, among others, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q.

Contacts:

David JeffersonThe Walt Disney CompanyCorporate Communicationsdavid.j.jefferson@disney.com(818) 560-4832

Mike LongThe Walt Disney CompanyCorporate Communicationsmike.p.long@disney.com(818) 560-4588

Elissa DoyleThird Point LLCChief Communications Officer and Head of ESG Engagementedoyle@thirdpoint.com(212) 715-4907

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Appoints Veteran Media And Technology Executive Carolyn Everson To Its Board Of Directors - The Walt Disney Company - The Walt Disney Company

Artificial Intelligence in Health Care: Benefits and Challenges of Machine Learning Technologies for Medical Diagnostics – Government Accountability…

What GAO Found

Several machine learning (ML) technologies are available in the U.S. to assist with the diagnostic process. The resulting benefits include earlier detection of diseases; more consistent analysis of medical data; and increased access to care, particularly for underserved populations. GAO identified a variety of ML-based technologies for five selected diseases certain cancers, diabetic retinopathy, Alzheimers disease, heart disease, and COVID-19 with most technologies relying on data from imaging such as x-rays or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). However, these ML technologies have generally not been widely adopted.

Academic, government, and private sector researchers are working to expand the capabilities of ML-based medical diagnostic technologies. In addition, GAO identified three broader emerging approachesautonomous, adaptive, and consumer-oriented ML-diagnosticsthat can be applied to diagnose a variety of diseases. These advances could enhance medical professionals capabilities and improve patient treatments but also have certain limitations. For example, adaptive technologies may improve accuracy by incorporating additional data to update themselves, but automatic incorporation of low-quality data may lead to inconsistent or poorer algorithmic performance.

Spectrum of adaptive algorithms

We identified several challenges affecting the development and adoption of ML in medical diagnostics:

These challenges affect various stakeholders including technology developers, medical providers, and patients, and may slow the development and adoption of these technologies.

GAO developed three policy options that could help address these challenges or enhance the benefits of ML diagnostic technologies. These policy options identify possible actions by policymakers, which include Congress, federal agencies, state and local governments, academic and research institutions, and industry. See below for a summary of the policy options and relevant opportunities and considerations.

Policy Options to Help Address Challenges or Enhance Benefits of ML Diagnostic Technologies

Evaluation (reportpage 28)

Policymakers could create incentives, guidance, or policies to encourage or require the evaluation of ML diagnostic technologies across a range of deployment conditions and demographics representative of the intended use.

This policy option could help address the challenge of demonstrating real world performance.

Data Access (reportpage 29)

Policymakers could develop or expand access to high-quality medical data to develop and test ML medical diagnostic technologies. Examples include standards for collecting and sharing data, creating data commons, or using incentives to encourage data sharing.

This policy option could help address the challenge of demonstrating real world performance.

Collaboration (reportpage 30)

Policymakers could promote collaboration among developers, providers, and regulators in the development and adoption of ML diagnostic technologies. For example, policymakers could convene multidisciplinary experts together in the design and development of these technologies through workshops and conferences.

This policy option could help address the challenges of meeting medical needs and addressing regulatory gaps.

Source: GAO. | GAO-22-104629

Diagnostic errors affect more than 12 million Americans each year, with aggregate costs likely in excess of $100 billion, according to a report by the Society to Improve Diagnosis in Medicine. ML, a subfield of artificial intelligence, has emerged as a powerful tool for solving complex problems in diverse domains, including medical diagnostics. However, challenges to the development and use of machine learning technologies in medical diagnostics raise technological, economic, and regulatory questions.

GAO was asked to conduct a technology assessment on the current and emerging uses of machine learning in medical diagnostics, as well as the challenges and policy implications of these technologies. This report discusses (1) currently available ML medical diagnostic technologies for five selected diseases, (2) emerging ML medical diagnostic technologies, (3) challenges affecting the development and adoption of ML technologies for medical diagnosis, and (4) policy options to help address these challenges.

GAO assessed available and emerging ML technologies; interviewed stakeholders from government, industry, and academia; convened a meeting of experts in collaboration with the National Academy of Medicine; and reviewed reports and scientific literature. GAO is identifying policy options in this report.

For more information, contact Karen L. Howard at (202) 512-6888 or howardk@gao.gov.

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Artificial Intelligence in Health Care: Benefits and Challenges of Machine Learning Technologies for Medical Diagnostics - Government Accountability...

How the remittance space has evolved with technology – The Financial Express

Foreign remittances are a lifeline for millions across the globe, and nowhere is this more evident than in India. In fact, with more than 30 million Indians residing outside the country, India is the worlds largest inward remittance corridor, receiving $87 billion in 2021, according to the World Bank.

When an unprecedented pandemic hit the world in early 2020, there was much concern that debilitating lockdowns would cause declines in remittance flows. However, these fears were unfounded, and remittance flows remained resilient owing to factors including the shift to digital methods of money transfers facilitated by technology-based solutions.

A shift in the remittance landscape

While remittances have existed in both informal and formal ways, the pandemic has accelerated a shift in flows to more formal channels. Thanks to technology, people were able to transfer money using digital cross-border payment services, allowing funds to flow even during lockdowns and travel bans. According to the World Bank, remittance corridors with digital payment options have increased every quarter since 2016, nearly tripling in the last four years.

Rapid innovations that have made transfers cheaper and more convenient are contributing to increased consumer expectations. Consumers are becoming accustomed to improvements in speed, pricing, and transparency across all industries, whether its retail, entertainment, or health. Hence its only natural theyd come to expect similar for finance and remittances.

Also Read: 5 ways to maximise credit card benefits this festive season

Rising up to meet these expectations is a new breed of service providers who are overhauling the industry by combining fair exchange rates with more reliable, fast, and simple ways to securely send money across borders. Companies like Wise have even built alternatives to replace the outdated correspondent banking system, thus eliminating expensive intermediaries and bottlenecks. Companies in this space have plenty more to solve for, and the race is now on to bring prices even lower and offer more efficient and convenient services.

Technology Innovations

The key to delivering a better experience can be found in digital transformation and strategic partnerships. There have been many technological innovations enabling this for the remittance sector heres a lowdown on the latest changes revolutionizing fintech.

Firstly, the development of the Application Programming Interface (API) has impacted the industry significantly. Employing new technology can enhance a banks offering, and APIs enable incumbents to collaborate with fintechs, leveraging their innovation to offer an enhanced product offering.

Secondly, countries around the world have made huge leaps in modernizing payment infrastructure. India with her real-time payment rails, Unified Payment Interface (UPI), is a prime example of stellar forward thinking. We have also seen countries in the region such as Singapore allowing non-banks to gain direct access to their real-time payments infrastructure, which enables these providers to offer customers even faster and cheaper international transactions.

Lastly, and perhaps the most underrated shift for consumers has been the elimination of the need to physically visit a bank. Gone are the days of long queues at the banks or having to go to a physical remittance branch to send money. People want to transact money online and on the move with their smartphones.

Conclusion:

India is home to one of the most globally-connected populations, and one where technology is the catalyst to ensure consumers get seamless, speedy and transparent remittances. Given the importance of remittances for millions in India and outside, these are exciting times as the fintech sector advances, particularly in the payments space where were seeing an emergence of players solving for diverse needs and governmental efforts to facilitate growth through real-time payment initiatives like UPI. The industry is at the forefront of a payments revolution that is only just beginning to give consumers the level of experience they deserve.

(By Rashmi Satpute, Country Manager of Wise India)

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How the remittance space has evolved with technology - The Financial Express

Breaking through the mucus barrier | MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology – MIT News

One reason that its so difficult to deliver large protein drugs orally is that these drugs cant pass through the mucus barrier that lines the digestive tract. This means that insulin and most other biologic drugs drugs consisting of proteins or nucleic acids have to be injected or administered in a hospital.

A new drug capsule developed at MIT may one day be able to replace those injections. The capsule has a robotic cap that spins and tunnels through the mucus barrier when it reaches the small intestine, allowing drugs carried by the capsule to pass into cells lining the intestine.

By displacing the mucus, we can maximize the dispersion of the drug within a local area and enhance the absorption of both small molecules and macromolecules, says Giovanni Traverso, the Karl van Tassel Career Development Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering at MIT and a gastroenterologist at Brigham and Womens Hospital.

In a study appearing today in Science Robotics, the researchers demonstrated that they could use this approach to deliver insulin as well as vancomycin, an antibiotic peptide that currently has to be injected.

Shriya Srinivasan, a research affiliate at MITs Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research and a junior fellow at the Society of Fellows at Harvard University, is the lead author of the study.

Tunneling through

For several years, Traversos lab has been developing strategies to deliver protein drugs such as insulin orally. This is a difficult task because protein drugs tend to be broken down in acidic environment of the digestive tract, and they also have difficulty penetrating the mucus barrier that lines the tract.

To overcome those obstacles, Srinivasan came up with the idea of creating a protective capsule that includes a mechanism that can tunnel through mucus, just as tunnel boring machines drill into soil and rock.

I thought that if we could tunnel through the mucus, then we could deposit the drug directly on the epithelium, she says. The idea is that you would ingest this capsule and the outer layer would dissolve in the digestive tract, exposing all these features that start to churn through the mucus and clear it.

The RoboCap capsule, which is about the size of a multivitamin, carries its drug payload in a small reservoir at one end and carries the tunnelling features in its main body and surface. The capsule is coated with gelatin that can be tuned to dissolve at a specific pH.

When the coating dissolves, the change in pH triggers a tiny motor inside the RoboCap capsule to start spinning. This motion helps the capsule to tunnel into the mucus and displace it. The capsule is also coated with small studs that brush mucus away, similar to the action of a toothbrush.

The spinning motion also helps to erode the compartment that carries the drug, which is gradually released into the digestive tract.

What the RoboCap does is transiently displace the initial mucus barrier and then enhance absorption by maximizing the dispersion of the drug locally, Traverso says. By combining all of these elements, were really maximizing our capacity to provide the optimal situation for the drug to be absorbed.

Enhanced delivery

In tests in animals, the researchers used this capsule to deliver either insulin or vancomycin, a large peptide antibiotic that is used to treat a broad range of infections, including skin infections as well as infections affecting orthopedic implants. With the capsule, the researchers found that they could deliver 20 to 40 times more drug than a similar capsule without the tunneling mechanism.

Once the drug is released from the capsule, the capsule itself passes through the digestive tract on its own. The researchers found no sign of inflammation or irritation in the digestive tract after the capsule passed through, and they also observed that the mucus layer reforms within a few hours after being displaced by the capsule.

Another approach that some researchers have used to enhance oral delivery of drugs is to give them along with additional drugs that help them cross through the intestinal tissue. However, these enhancers often only work with certain drugs. Because the MIT teams new approach relies solely on mechanical disruptions to the mucus barrier, it could potentially be applied to a broader set of drugs, Traverso says.

Some of the chemical enhancers preferentially work with certain drug molecules, he says. Using mechanical methods of administration can potentially enable more drugs to have enhanced absorption.

While the capsule used in this study released its payload in the small intestine, it could also be used to target the stomach or colon by changing the pH at which the gelatin coating dissolves. The researchers also plan to explore the possibility of delivering other protein drugs such as GLP1 receptor agonist, which is sometimes used to treat type 2 diabetes. The capsules could also be used to deliver topical drugs to treat ulcerative colitis and other inflammatory conditions by maximizing the local concentration of the drugs in the tissue to help treat the inflammation.

The research was funded, in part, by the National Institutes of Health and MITs Department of Mechanical Engineering.

Other authors of the paper include Amro Alshareef, Alexandria Hwang, Ziliang Kang, Johannes Kuosmanen, Keiko Ishida, Joshua Jenkins, Sabrina Liu, Wiam Abdalla Mohammed Madani, Jochen Lennerz, Alison Hayward, Josh Morimoto, Nina Fitzgerald, and Robert Langer.

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Breaking through the mucus barrier | MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology - MIT News

SEC Charges The Hydrogen Technology Corp. and its Former CEO for Market Manipulation of Crypto Asset Securities – SEC.gov

Washington D.C., Sept. 28, 2022

The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced charges against The Hydrogen Technology Corporation, its former CEO, Michael Ross Kane, and Tyler Ostern, the CEO of Moonwalkers Trading Limited, a self-described market making firm, for their roles in effectuating the unregistered offers and sales of crypto asset securities called Hydro and for perpetrating a scheme to manipulate the trading volume and price of those securities, which yielded more than $2 million for Hydrogen.

The SECs complaint alleges that starting in January 2018, Kane and Hydrogen, a New York-based financial technology company, created its Hydro token and then publicly distributed the token through various methods: an airdrop, which is essentially giving away Hydro to the public; bounty programs, which paid the token to individuals in exchange for promoting it; employee compensation; and direct sales on crypto asset trading platforms. The complaint further alleges that, after distributing the token in those ways, Kane and Hydrogen hired Moonwalkers, a South Africa-based firm, in October 2018, to create the false appearance of robust market activity for Hydro through the use of its customized trading software or bot and then selling Hydro into that artificially inflated market for profit on Hydrogens behalf. Hydrogen allegedly reaped profits of more than $2 million as a result of the defendants conduct.

Companies cannot avoid the federal securities laws by structuring the unregistered offers and sales of their securities as bounties, compensation, or other such methods, said Carolyn M. Welshhans, Associate Director of the SECs Enforcement Division. As our enforcement action shows, the SEC will enforce the laws that prohibit such unregistered fund-raising schemes in order to protect investors.

As we allege, the defendants profited from their manipulation by creating a misleading picture of Hydros market activity, said Joseph Sansone, Chief of the Enforcement Divisions Market Abuse Unit. The SEC is committed to ensuring fair markets for all types of securities and will continue to expose and hold market manipulators accountable.

The SECs complaint, filed in federal district court in Manhattan, charges Hydrogen, Kane, and Ostern with violating the registration, antifraud, and market manipulation provisions of the securities laws and seeks permanent injunctive relief, conduct-based injunctions, disgorgement with prejudgment interest, civil penalties, and, as to Kane, an officer and director bar. Without admitting or denying the allegations, Ostern has consented to a judgment, subject to court approval, permanently enjoining him from violating these provisions and participating in future securities offerings and ordering him to pay $36,750 in disgorgement and prejudgment interest of $5,118, with civil monetary penalties to be determined at a later date by the court. Ostern has also agreed to an administrative order imposing a collateral industry bar and penny stock bar.

The SECs investigation was conducted by Sonia G. Torrico and Kathleen Hitchins, with assistance from John Marino of the Market Abuse Unit, David Crosbie from the Crypto Assets and Cyber Unit, and Olga Cruz-Ortiz of IT Forensics. The case was supervised by Paul Kim, Mr. Sansone, and Ms. Welshhans. The SECs litigation will be led by Nick Margida and supervised by James Connor. The SEC appreciates the assistance of the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority, the Financial Sector Conduct Authority of South Africa, the Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway, and the Monetary Authority of Singapore.

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SEC Charges The Hydrogen Technology Corp. and its Former CEO for Market Manipulation of Crypto Asset Securities - SEC.gov

Deep state used "weather manipulation technology" on Ian to hurt DeSantis, says ex-InfoWars host (video) – Boing Boing

QAnon is still alive and kicking, and this week's mad revelation brought to us by two GQP candidates who lost in 2020 is that the magical deep state used "weather manipulation technology" to power up Hurricane Ian. The reason? To punish Gov. Ron DeSantis. (See video below.)

"We understand the deep state they have weather manipulation technology they know how to manipulate and create big storms," spouted far-right online host DeAnna Lorraine, who both failed to beat Nancy Pelosi in the last midterms and keep her job on InfoWars (after her brief hosting stint she was immediately iced out by Alex Jones.)

And then, to back up her claim, "These huge hurricanes always seem to target red states, red districts, and always at a convenient time typically, right before elections," she continued, failing to mention that hurricane season has long coincided with the timing of U.S. elections. "Or in this case because Ron DeSantis has been stepping out of line a lot challenging, fighting the Deep State."

Lorraine's co-conspirator, Lauren Witzke, took her Que and ran with it.

"Well we know the technology does exist. I mean, DeAnna, they're literally trying to change people's DNA through vaccination. Of course they would be willing to do something like this to target red states. I'm not putting it past the elites to target something like this towards Florida as punishment for getting rid of vaccine mandates or getting rid of child grooming."

And you can bet the elites use space lasers to get the job done.

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Deep state used "weather manipulation technology" on Ian to hurt DeSantis, says ex-InfoWars host (video) - Boing Boing

+ CIO Recognize Business Technology Innovation with Inaugural 2022 CIO Awards Canada – IDC

Winners and the industry at large will convene virtually at CIO's Future of Digital Innovation Summit & Awards Canada at the end of November.

Toronto, ON, September 30, 2022 International Data Corporation (IDC) Canada and Foundry's CIO, are pleased to recognize our first class of CIO Award winners for Canada. Winners, attendees and the industry at large will convene virtually at the end of November at CIOs Future of Digital Innovation Summit & Awards Canada to recognize these premier organizations and executives driving IT innovation in Canada. This year's winners exemplify how IT leaders are driving business forward and setting their organizations up for success.

CIO's Future of Digital Innovation Summit & Awards Canada

The CIO Awards for Canada will be presented during our upcoming virtual Future of Digital Innovation Summit & Awards Canada conference happening on November 29th and 30th. This event celebrates Canadian organizations and their innovative projects.

We're excited to celebrate our inaugural class of CIO Awards Canada 2022, which honours Canadian IT organizations for projects driving digital business growth through technology innovation. Many projects are related to solutions for data management, work collaboration for hybrid work culture and digital transformation to improve business processes like predictive approaches to drive data value and reducing the carbon footprints., said Lars Goransson, Managing Director, Canada, IDC. We are honoured to showcase these achievements and the people behind them as we gather virtually to experience CIOs Future of Digital Innovation Summit & Awards Canada at the end of November. The event will be co-produced by IDC and Foundrys CIO. We're also pleased to co-present TECHNATION's Ingenious Awards at the Summit it truly will be a celebration of innovation in Canada."

IDC + CIO are proud to feature the Ingenious Awards from Industry Partner TECHNATION as part of the conference. We're also pleased to welcome Sponsor Partners Cisco Systems, UiPath, SAP and Darktrace (as of press date). Our partners add further value to the agenda, providing in-depth knowledge and unique solutions to address many of the issues that attendees are facing in their daily roles.

Please visit CIOs Future of Digital Innovation Summit & Awards Canada to learn more about the conference and our partnership opportunities. Registration is open if you'd like to attend the event.

2022 CIO Award Canada Winners:

About CIO Awards Canada

The inaugural CIO Awards for Canada celebrate Canadian organizations and the teams within them that are using IT in innovative ways to deliver business value, whether by creating competitive advantage, optimizing business processes, enabling growth or improving relationships with customers. The award is an acknowledged mark of enterprise excellence and we are pleased to bring this award program to Canada. A list of all winning organizations will be available here later today.

About IDC

International Data Corporation (IDC) is the premier global provider of market intelligence, advisory services, and events for the information technology, telecommunications, and consumer technology markets. With more than 1,300 analysts worldwide, IDC offers global, regional, and local expertise on technology, IT benchmarking and sourcing, and industry opportunities and trends in over 110 countries. IDC's analysis and insight helps IT professionals, business executives, and the investment community to make fact-based technology decisions and to achieve their key business objectives. Founded in 1964, IDC is a wholly owned subsidiary of International Data Group (IDG), the world's leading tech media, data, and marketing services company. To learn more about IDC, please visit http://www.idc.com. To learn more about IDC Canada, please visit http://www.idc.com/ca or follow us on Twitter at @idccanada and on LinkedIn.

About CIO

CIO focuses on attracting the highest concentration of enterprise CIOs and business technology executives with unparalleled peer insight and expertise on business strategy, innovation, and leadership. As organizations grow with digital transformation, CIO provides its readers with key insights on career development, including certifications, hiring practices and skills development. The award-winning CIO portfolio provides business technology leaders with analysis and insight on information technology trends and a keen understanding of ITs role in achieving business goals. CIO is published by Foundry (formerly IDG Communications) and recently launched in Canada. Company information is available at https://foundryco.com/. Follow CIO on Twitter: @CIOonline &@CIOevents or on LinkedIn or Facebook.

About Foundry

Foundry (an IDG, Inc. company) is a trusted and dependable editorial voice, creating quality content to generate knowledge, engagement and deep relationships with our community of the most influential technology and security decision-makers. Our premium media brands including CIO, Computerworld, CSO, InfoWorld, Macworld, Network World, PCWorld and Tech Hive engage a quality audience of the most powerful technology buyers with essential guidance on the evolving technology landscape.

Our trusted brands inform our global data intelligence platform to identify and activate purchasing intent, powering our clients success. Our marketing services creates custom content with marketing impact across video, mobile, social and digital. We simplify complex campaigns that fulfill marketers global ambitions seamlessly, with consistency that delivers quality results and wins awards. Additional information about Foundry is available at https://foundryco.com/.

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Leveraging AR/VR Technology in SMEs, Accelerating Business Growth – Analytics Insight

Although AR and VR are often used in the same phrase, there are differences between both technologies. Augmented reality refers to the projection of virtual information to enhance the viewers native environment. On the other hand, virtual reality is used to refer to technology that transposes a viewer into an entirely simulated environment altogether. Regardless, augmented reality and virtual reality both centers around creating an immersive digital experience for the user. They bring real, measurable benefits to companies looking for ways how to accelerate business growth, as well as other key metrics like conversion rates, retention rates, and profit margins.

The most straightforward application of AR/VR would be to use them as part of marketing strategies. Social media platforms like Facebook already have in place the ability to publish augmented reality ads. Additionally, these immersive experiences help boost brand awareness, visually differentiate a business from competitors and make engaging with customers a possibility in the age of social distancing. Google is also rolling out a view in 3D mobile search result feature for e-commerce platforms. Provided your product is optimized to rank high enough on search engine result pages, this will allow consumers to use augmented reality to view your product as if it were right before their very eyes.

The use of augmented and virtual reality technologies allows businesses to not only connect with tech-minded job candidates but also attract talent from a rising pool of working millennialsmany of whom may find themselves more at home in digital settings. Using VR or AR as part of the hiring process allows companies to put complex, and otherwise unobservable concepts in plain sight. For example, a healthcare tech company may want to simulate the way their revolutionary technology works in the human body.

If the job requires employees to be based in a vastly different environment, immersive technology can also provide candidates with first-person insight into the setting of their possible workplace and living environment. This streamlines the hiring process and helps the candidate to manage their expectations and gain a greater understanding of their job scope and suitability for the position.

Although AR/VR is presently most well known as a customer engagement tool, these technologies can also be used to enhance the workplace experience and boost employee engagement. As an employee initiation tool, virtual and augmented reality can be used to simulate on-site scenarios to allow employees to learn new skills without logistical or locational difficulties, or real-time pressure from customers or managers. The use of AR/VR for employee training becomes even more attractive with jobs that pose certain risks, allowing new employees to practice their tasks without fear of harm or injury. Additionally, AR can also be used to subsidize training costs. While an initial investment in specialized gear is often necessary, things like AR/VR headsets or even mobile apps are reusable and will offset the costs needed for guided lessons or training seminars.

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Analytics Insight is an influential platform dedicated to insights, trends, and opinions from the world of data-driven technologies. It monitors developments, recognition, and achievements made by Artificial Intelligence, Big Data and Analytics companies across the globe.

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Leveraging AR/VR Technology in SMEs, Accelerating Business Growth - Analytics Insight

How the false rumor of a Chinese coup went viral – MIT Technology Review

India has the third-largest number of Twitter users in the world. Considering the long-standing geopolitical tensions between India and China, plus the relative lack of knowledge that average Indians likely have about Chinese politics and how to discern Falun Gongbacked media accounts, its not necessarily surprising that they fell for and spread the rumor.

Despite several recent reports on the rise of bot activity originating in India, theres not yet enough evidence to determine whether this was a coordinated effort to push the coup rumor. There are suspicious signs, like a lot of new accounts as well as the fact some of the key influencers now [are] suspended, Jones told me. This does not necessarily point to it being state-backedjust a lot of inauthentic activities.

Of course, since this is Twitter, many other accounts are capitalizing on the popularity of this discourse and in turn further amplifying the story. This includes people intentionally trolling unsuspecting users by pairing old videos with the new rumor, and some users in Africa are hijacking the hashtag to gain visibility for their own contentapparently a long-practiced trick among users in Nigeria and Kenya.

By Monday, the rumor had mostly died down. While Xi still hadnt shown up, recent documents reaffirmed his participation and influence in the coming party congress, demonstrating that hes very much still in power.

The fact that a completely unsubstantiated rumor, one that basically happens every other month in Chinese Twitter circles, could grow so big and have tricked so many people is both funny and depressing. The bottom line: Social media is still a mess full of misinformationbut you may not notice that mess if you are not familiar with the issue being discussed.

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How the false rumor of a Chinese coup went viral - MIT Technology Review

Deepfake Technology Will Allow Bruce Willis to Return to Cinema – PetaPixel

Hollywood star Bruce Willis has licensed his image to a technology company that has made a digital twin of him to be used in future movies.

Engineers at Deepcake have created an ultra-realistic version of the Die Hard actor who sold his rights to the Delaware-based company.

I liked the precision with which my character turned out. Its a mini-movie in my usual action-comedy genre. For me, it is a great opportunity to go back in time, Willis says in a statement on the companys website.

With the advent of modern technology, even when I was on another continent, I was able to communicate, work and participate in the filming. Its a very new and interesting experience, and I thank our entire team.

Willis twin has already debuted in the below advert for Russian telecoms giant Megafon where understudy Konstantin Solovyov was the reference for the stars face to be masked on.

The 67-year-old announced his retirement from acting in March this year after he was diagnosed with aphasia, which affects a persons speech and language. He appeared in over 70 films including Die Hard, Armageddon, and Pulp Fiction.

Deepcake has said that it is under discussion to strike similar deals with others actors, alive and dead. It hopes to be the biggest talent agency of its kind, bringing iconic players back to the silver screen.

We create digital twins of celebrities and the actual production process doesnt require the physical presence of a celebrity on stage, Deepcake CEO Maria Chmir says.

It means comics like Charlie Chaplin and Kevin Hart can interact in one frame now.

While Willis is the first Hollywood actor to announce his digital twin publicly, it is alleged that other celebrities such as Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jim Carey, and Michelle Pfeiffer have virtual versions of themselves.

As the Telegraph notes, while deepfakes are a potential danger to society, for Hollywood actors it opens up the possibility to star in films even after they are dead.

At the 2012 Coachella Festival dead rapper Tupac Shakur performed alongside Dr. Dre, and similarly living and dead actors could theoretically appear in the same movie together.

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Pioneering medical drone project wins award for Excellence in Technology and Innovation – University of Strathclyde

A consortium involving Strathclyde researchers that will deliver what will be the UKs first medical distribution network using drones has triumphed in the Scottish Transport Awards.

The Project CAELUS (Care & Equity Healthcare Logistics UAS Scotland) consortium led by AGS Airports in partnership with NHS Scotland scooped the Excellence in Technology and Innovation accolade at industry awards in Glasgow on Thursday 29 September.

The project, which brings together 16 partners including Strathclyde, is working to deliver what will be the first national drone network that can transport essential medicines, bloods and other medical supplies throughout Scotland including to remote communities.

CAELUS was praised by Scottish Transport Award judges at the event where Minister for Transport Jenny Gilruth MSP and host Grant Stott welcomed 450 industry professionals to celebrate the people and organisations that make a real difference to transport across Scotland.

Principal Investigator Dr Marco Fossati, of the Aerospace Centre of Excellence at the University of Strathclyde, said:

This award recognises innovation and dedication of the Project CAELUS team and the potentially transformative impact we can have on Scotlands healthcare system.

The consortiums work aims to revolutionises the accessibility of the medical supply chain through investment and research in technology.

Fiona Smith, AGS Airports Group Head of Aerodrome Strategy and CAELUS Project Director, said: We were delighted when we heard we had been shortlisted in the Scottish Transport Awards earlier this year, so to win is a fantastic achievement.

The CAELUS project is set to revolutionise the way in which healthcare services are delivered in Scotland. A drone network can ensure critical medical supplies can be delivered more efficiently, it can reduce waiting times for test results and, more importantly, it can provide equity of care between urban and remote rural communities.

This award is testament to the hard work by all the partners involved in this consortium and I thank them all as we continue onto the next phase of work.

Since securing 1.5 million in January 2020, the consortium has designed drone landing stations for NHS sites across Scotland and developed a virtual model (digital twin) of the proposed delivery network which connects hospitals, pathology laboratories, distribution centres and GP surgeries across Scotland.

CAELUS secured 10.1 million funding from the Future Flight Challenge at UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) in July launch its next phase, which will involve live flight trials and removing remaining barriers to safely using drones at scale within Scotlands airspace.

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Pioneering medical drone project wins award for Excellence in Technology and Innovation - University of Strathclyde

Messenger RNA Technology Fast-Tracked for Treating for Heart Conditions – The Epoch Times

An Australian government research fund has granted $1.7 million (US$1.1 million) to target three major cardiovascular diseases using messenger RNA (mRNA) technology, accelerating the use of gene therapys treatment of diseases beyond COVID-19.

Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute, one of Australias oldest medical research organisations focused on heart disease, welcomed the grant from Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF).

We are grateful to the MRFF for funding us to advance this important research, Baker Institutes head of molecular imaging and theranostics Xiaowei Wang said in a statement on Sep. 28.

Associate Prof. Wang said that the mRNA-based therapies will directly reduce inflammation and blockages for three major heart diseasesatherosclerosis, pulmonary hypertension, and abdominal aortic aneurysmwhich currently have limited cures and all start with inflammation.

For each of these cardiovascular diseases, we will design a unique delivery system using novel nanoparticles, target the disease, then trigger the release of the mRNA, Wang said.

She says that these therapies require smaller doses because they are targeted.

Current drug therapies require high doses because they are not delivered specifically to the disease area and have harmful systemic side effects, Wang said.

The mRNA-based targeted strategies that we are investigating can stop the progression of inflammation, providing the opportunities of preventing cardiovascular disease events like heart attack, stroke, and heart failure without the unwanted side effects.

The rapid development of mRNA vaccines against COVID-19 has made mRNA companies hopeful about developing therapies for other targets such as heart disease, cancer, liver disease, and multiple sclerosis.

However, an increased rate of diseases, including cancer, has been reported to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) following COVID-19 vaccinations, of which the majority have been mRNA vaccines.

In the VAERS database, 284 cases of breast cancer were reported after COVID-19 vaccination, while just 350 cases have been reported in the history of VAERS.

There have also been concerning reports of shingles. VAERS data shows that 7,559 cases of shingles have been reported following COVID-19 vaccination.

Over the entire history of VAERS, 28,180 cases of shingles have been reported following any vaccination, meaning that around a quarter of shingles cases occurred after COVID-19 vaccination.

A pre-study recently observed that nanoparticles used to transport mRNA in COVID-19 vaccines inhibited and altered the immune response, shedding light on the adverse events.

The nanoparticles, claimed to be non-toxic and safe, were also found in a 2021 University of Philadelphia study to be highly inflammatory.

In Australia, a fifth dose has been recommended for people who are severely immunocompromised or have an underlying medical condition or disability.

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Messenger RNA Technology Fast-Tracked for Treating for Heart Conditions - The Epoch Times

The Eight Genders in the Talmud | My Jewish Learning

Thought nonbinary gender was a modern concept? Think again. The ancient Jewish understanding of gender was far more nuanced than many assume.

The Talmud, a huge and authoritative compendium of Jewish legal traditions, contains in fact no less than eight gender designations including:

In fact, not only did the rabbis recognize six genders that were neither male nor female, they had a tradition that the first human being was both. Versions of this midrash are found throughout rabbinic literature, including in the Talmud:

Rabbi Yirmeya ben Elazar also said: Adam was first created with two faces (one male and the other female). As it is stated: You have formed me behind and before, and laid Your hand upon me. (Psalms 139:5)

Rabbi Yirmeya ben Elazar imagines that the first human was created both male and female with two faces. Later, this original human being was separated and became two distinct people, Adam and Eve. According to this midrash then, the first human being was, to use contemporary parlance, nonbinary. Genesis Rabbah 8:1 offers a slightly different version of Rabbi Yirmeyas teaching:

Rabbi Yirmeya ben Elazar: In the hour when the Holy One created the first human, He created him as an androgynos (one having both male and female sexual characteristics), as it is said, male and female He created them. (Genesis 1:27)

Said Rabbi Shmuel bar Nachmani: In the hour when the Holy One created the first human, He created for him a double face, and sawed him and made him backs, a back here and a back there, as it is said, Behind and before, You formed me (Psalms 139:5).

In this version of the teaching, Rabbi Yirmeya is not focusing on the first humans face (or, rather, faces) but on their sex organs they have both. The midrash imagines this original human looked something like a man and woman conjoined at the back so that one side has a womens face and a womans sex organs and the other side has a mans face and sex organs. Then God split this original person in half, creating the first man and woman. Ancient history buffs will recognize this image as similar to the character Aristophanes description of the first humans as both male and female, eventually sundered to create lone males and females forever madly seeking one another for the purposes of reuniting to experience that primordial state. (Plato, Symposium, 189ff)

For the rabbis, the androgynos wasnt just a thing of the mythic past. The androgynos was in fact a recognized gender category in their present though not with two heads, only both kinds of sex organs. The term appears no less than 32 times in the Mishnah and 283 times in the Talmud. Most of these citations are not variations on this myth, but rather discussions that consider how Jewish law (halakhah) applies to one who has both male and female sexual characteristics.

That the androgynos is, from a halakhic perspective, neither male nor female, is confirmed by Mishnah Bikkurim 4:1, which states this explicitly:

The androgynos is in some ways like men, and in other ways like women. In other ways he is like men and women, and in others he is like neither men nor women.

Because Hebrew has no gender neutral pronoun, the Mishnah uses a male pronoun for the androgynos, though this is obviously insufficient given the rabbinic descriptions of this person. Reading on we find that the androgynos is, for the rabbis, in many ways like a man they dress like a man, they are obligated in all commandments like a man, they marry women and their white emissions lead to impurity. However, in other ways, the androgynos is like a woman they do not share in inheritance like sons, they do not eat of sacrifices that are reserved only for men and their red discharge leads to impurity.

The Mishnah goes on to list ways in which an androgynos is just like any other person. Like any human being, one who strikes him or curses him is liable. (Bikkurim 4:3) Similarly, one who murders an androgynos is, well, a murderer. But the androgynos is also unlike a man or a woman in other important legal respects for instance, such a person is not liable for entering the Temple in a state of impurity as both a man and woman would be.

As should now be clear, the rabbinic interest in these gender ambiguous categories is largely legal. Since halakhah was structured for a world in which most people were either male or female, applying the law to individuals who didnt fall neatly into one of those two categories was challenging. As Rabbi Yose remarks in this same chapter of the Mishnah: The androgynos is a unique creature, and the sages could not decide about him. (Bikkurim 4:5)

In many cases, the androgynos is lumped together with other kinds of nonbinary persons as well as other marginalized populations, including women, slaves, the disabled and minors. For example, concerning participation in the three pilgrimage festivals (Passover, Shavuot and Sukkot) during which the Jews of antiquity would travel to the Temple in Jerusalem, the mishnah of Chagigah opens:

All are obligated on the three pilgrimage festivals to appear in the Temple and sacrifice an offering, except for a deaf-mute, an imbecile, and a minor; and a tumtum, an androgynos, women, and slaves who are not emancipated; and the lame, the blind, the sick, and the old, and one who is unable to ascend to Jerusalem on his own legs.

As this mishnah indicates, it is only healthy, free adult men who are obligated to appear at the Temple to observe the pilgrimage festivals. People who are not adult men, and men who are enslaved or too old or unwell to make the journey, are exempt.

As we have already stated, the androgynos was not the only person of ambiguous gender identified by the rabbis. Similarly, the rabbis recognized one whose sexual characteristics are lacking or difficult to determine, called a tumtum. In the mishnah from Bikkurim we cited earlier, Rabbi Yose, who said the androgynos was legally challenging for the sages, said the tumtum was much easier to figure out.

The rabbis also recognized that some peoples sexual characteristics can change with puberty either naturally or through intervention. Less common than the androgynos and tumtum, but still found throughout rabbinic texts, are the aylonit, who is born with organs identified as female at birth but develops male characteristics at puberty or no sex characteristics at all, and the saris, who is born with male-identified organs and later develops features recognized as female (or no sex characteristics). These changes can happen naturally over time (saris hamah) or with human intervention (saris adam).

For the rabbis, what is most significant about the aylonit and the saris is that they are presumed infertile the latter is sometimes translated as eunuch. Their inability to have offspring creates legal complications the rabbis address, for example:

A woman who is 20 years old who did not grow two pubic hairs shall bring proof that she is twenty years old, and from that point forward she assumes the status of an aylonit. If she marries and her husband dies childless, she neither performs halitzah nor does she enter into levirate marriage.

A woman who reaches the age of 20 without visible signs of puberty, in particular pubic hair, is deemed an aylonit who is infertile. According to this mishnah, she may still marry, but it is not expected that she will bear children. Therefore, if her husband dies and the couple is in fact childless, his brother is not obligated to marry her, as would normally be required by the law of levirate marriage.

A nonbinary person who does not have the same halakhic status as a male or female, but is something else that is best described as ambiguous or in between, presented a halakhic challenge that was not particularly foreign for the rabbis, who discuss analogs in the animal and plant kingdoms. For example, the rabbinic texts describe a koi as an animal that is somewhere between wild and domesticated (Mishnah Bikkurim 2:8) and an etrog yes, that beautiful citron that is essential for Sukkot as between a fruit and a vegetable (Mishnah Bikkurim 2:6, see also Rosh Hashanah 14). Because they dont fit neatly into common categories, the koi and the etrog require special halakhic consideration. The rabbinic understanding of the world was that most categories be they animal, vegetable or mineral are imperfect descriptors of the world, either as it is or as it should be.

In recent decades, queer Jews and allies have sought to reinterpret these eight genders of the Talmud as a way of reclaiming a positive space for nonbinary Jews in the tradition. The starting point is that while it is true that the Talmud understands gender to largely operate on a binary axis, the rabbis clearly understood that not everyone fits these categories.

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A Daf Yomi Scout: Literary Critic Adam Kirsch Shares Insights from His Seven-Year Study of the Talmud with YU Students – Yu News

Literary critic, poet andWall Street Journaleditor Adam Kirsch visited Yeshiva University on September 21 for a conversation with students from theZahava and Moshael Straus Center for Torah and Western Thoughtand theJay and Jeannie Schottenstein Honors Program. Kirsch spoke with Straus Center Program Officer Tal Fortgang and a room full of Yeshiva College students about his book,Come and Hear: What I Saw in My Seven-and-a-Half-Year Journey Through the Talmud, and his series of columns forTableton hisDaf Yomi(daily Talmud study)excursion.

Kirsch began by explaining what motivated him to take on the project ofDaf Yomias a non-Orthodox Jew, literary critic and novice in the world of Talmud study. He was inspired by the 2012Siyum HaShas(celebration of the completion of theDaf Yomicycle)and figured he could gain insights into what animated todays Orthodox Jews, as well as how the ancient sages continue to exert an influence over Jewish cultureobservant or nottoday.

He immediately began receiving feedback on his discoveries, as chronicled in a regular column atTablet. Kirsch reports hearing from yeshiva students and non-observant Jews alike, and began to see his mission as acting as a scout for people with backgrounds similar to his ownthose who had not encountered the Talmuds unique mode of argument or its assumptions about the intermingling of the natural and supernatural worlds.

Kirsch emphasized to the students in attendance that an element of Talmud study that stands out to an outsider is that the argument is often an end in and of itself. He also pointed out that because the Talmud is more than just a code of lawit touches on so many different topics, involves many indeterminate arguments and records many episodes not legal in natureit allows Jews in every era to share reference points that can unify a people who may be geographically and philosophically disparate. For instance, the term tikkun olam meant one thing in the time of the Talmud, another thing in the Medieval era and another thing to many contemporary Jews. Whether or not Jews today are using the term in accordance with its original meaning, they still feel the need to ground their understanding in a term that resonates with other Jews.

Students eagerly peppered Kirsch with questions about the past, present and future of Talmud study. Kirsch noted in response that study of the Gemara is undergoing a renaissance today among observant Jews, academics and people simply interested in understanding the development of Jewish thought. He contrasted this renaissance with early American Jewish literature, which derided Talmud study as backward and barbaric, a symbol of the old world American Jews were leaving behind.

Today, he concluded, the Talmud is available in many languages, on many platforms, with many commentaries, at the push of a button. Whether the democratization of Talmud study will turn out to be good for the Jews or not is yet to be seen.

The event was the latest in a series sponsored or co-sponsored by the Straus Center and Schottenstein Honors Program. Recent events included a conversation with theJerusalem Posts Zvika Klein and a dinner discussion withTablets Liel Leibovitz and YUs own Rabbi Daniel Feldman.

You can learn more about the Straus Center by signing up for our newsletterhere. Be sure to also like us onFacebook, follow us onTwitterandInstagramand connect with us onLinkedIn.

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A Daf Yomi Scout: Literary Critic Adam Kirsch Shares Insights from His Seven-Year Study of the Talmud with YU Students - Yu News

5 things to know about Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year – WDJT

By Zoe Sottile, CNN

(CNN) -- Sunday is the start of Rosh Hashanah, also known as the Jewish New Year, which marks the beginning of the Jewish High Holy Days.

The millennia-old holiday is an occasion for reflection and is often celebrated with prayer, symbolic foods, and the blowing of a traditional horn called a shofar. This year's Rosh Hashanah marks the start of year 5783 in the Hebrew calendar.

Here's what you need to know about the history and meaning of Rosh Hashanah.

Rosh Hashanah has its roots in the Talmud, although it isn't entirely clear when the holiday was first celebrated. The Talmud says that the world was created on the first day of Tishrei, the seventh month of the Hebrew calendar. Jewish people celebrate Rosh Hashanah on the first and second days of Tishrei -- which usually line up with September or October in the Gregorian calendar.

Although it's not completely clear when Jewish people first celebrated Rosh Hashanah, the Book of Leviticus includes a passage in which God tells Moses that the first day of the seventh month is a day for rest, marked with the blowing of a horn. But it doesn't include the name Rosh Hashanah.

According to National Geographic, the earliest mention of Rosh Hashanah by name is found in the Mishnah, a Jewish legal text dated to 200 C.E.

"Rosh Hashanah" means "head of the year" in Hebrew, and the two-day holiday is considered a time to reflect and repent in anticipation of the coming year.

It is also referred to as the "day of judgment." The holiday traditionally calls on people to consider how they might have failed or fallen short in the past year -- and how to improve and grow in the coming year.

This is symbolized by one of Rosh Hashanah's most iconic traditions, taschlich, in which participants symbolically cast off their sins by throwing morsels of bread into a body of running water.

There are 14.8 million Jewish people around the world, and practices associated with Rosh Hashanah vary even within individual communities. People usually celebrate Rosh Hashanah by attending synagogue and refraining from work -- including schoolwork -- and sometimes the use of electronics. Families might also light candles at home

Rosh Hashanah is often celebrated with special foods, like apples dipped in honey, which symbolize the hope of a sweet year to come.

Challah bread, baked in round loaves instead of braids and dipped in honey, is also popular. So are pomegranate seeds and the head of a ram or fish -- to symbolize the "head" of the new year.

One of the most distinctive elements of Rosh Hashanah is the blowing of the Shofar's horn, a ram's horn. The blowing of the horn is used as a call to repentance during the holiday.

The horn is typically blown in the morning of both days of Rosh Hashanah. The unique instrument dates back thousands of years to the time of Abraham and Isaac.

Rosh Hashanah kicks off the High Holy Days, also known as the Ten Days of Penitence. The High Holy Days end with Yom Kippur, which is considered the most sacred of Jewish religious holidays.

Yom Kippur is also known as the Day of Atonement. It represents an opportunity for people to atone for their sins and ask for forgiveness from God and other people.

While Rosh Hashanah tends to be a joyful celebration, Yom Kippur is a more somber holiday often marked by fasting.

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Why Bats Sleep Upside Down and The Secret of Yom Kippur – aish.com – Aish.com

Why Yom Kippur is one of the happiest days of the year.

A few years ago, I had the privilege of awarding someone a medallion at an AA meeting, a celebration of a significant milestone of sobriety. I am always inspired from being among people who have the courage to admit their addiction, name their enemy, and confront it on a regular basis.

The recovery program is made up of 12 steps, and the meeting I attended addressed Step 8, which is to make a list of all persons we had harmed, and become willing to make amends to them all and Step 9, to make direct amends to such people wherever possible, except when to do so would injure them or others.

People reflected on the experience of being willing to make amends with people, some whom they hurt and others they were hurt or injured by.Then one person got up and said something I found fascinating.When she arrived at this step in her recovery, she realized one of the people she most needed to make amends with was herself.The mistakes she had made, the excuses, missed opportunities, damaged relationships, sabotaged success she had caused herself, left her needing to be willing to forgive herself, to make amends with herself.

The next person who spoke disagreed and pointed out making it about ourselves is what got us into trouble to begin with. Amends is about others, it doesnt always have to be about the I, and that kind of thinking is misguided and can lead to bad outcomes.

I walked out of the meeting moved by both sides and thinking about this question. Who was right?

The Talmud reconciles two different statements of Reish Lakish. The first: Great is teshuva, repentance, as the penitents intentional sins are counted for him as unwitting transgressions. The second: Great is repentance, as ones intentional sins are counted for him as merits. The Talmud explains the seeming contradiction: When one repents out of love, a higher level of repentance, his sins become like merits, but when one repents out of fear, a lower level, his sins are counted as unwitting transgressions (Yoma 86b).

I understand how the power of teshuva can transform my mistakes, indiscretions, poor judgment, and intentional violations into accidental, careless ones.Picture a judge lightening a sentence because of good behavior and still putting criminal charges on the record, but lesser ones. But what does it mean that my intentional mistakes can become actual merits? How can those mistakes be turned into merits, virtues, assets, acting in ones favor?

Surprisingly, the answer can be derived from sleeping bats.

Many people know that bats sleep upside down but few know the reason. While bats can fly, they cant take off. Some birds can take off from a dead stop by simply flapping their wings, but bats cant. Birds wings are long and feathered and can generate enough thrust to achieve liftoff, but bats wings, as ScienceFriday explains, are basically large, webbed hands. Once airborne, a bat can use these webbed hands to sustain the flight over long distances and steer seamlessly, but they have a problem: they cant do the necessary flapping to take off.

Bats use the momentum from falling to take flight.

So what do bats do if they can fly but cant take off? The answer is they dont take off -- they fall down. During the night, they use their claws to climb up a tree. Once they get high enough off the ground, they drop, using gravity to gain momentum and they use the momentum from falling to take flight.

Perhaps this is the meaning of Talmud quoted above.Not all types of teshuva are equal. If you do teshuva because of fear of punishment, you dont want to suffer the consequence, then your fall can be considered accidental.

But if you do teshuva, not out of fear, but from love, enthusiasm and excitement then you are ready to fly and can use the momentum generated from your fall to give you lift, to take off, to discover things and achieve things you previously couldnt.

For many, Yom Kippur is a dreaded day, not only because of the physical pleasures we are denied but because they think it is a day to beat ourselves up, to rack ourselves with guilt, blame, fault, fear and dread.

Yom Kippur is not a day to beat ourselves up, to knock ourselves further down.

That couldnt be farther from the truth.The Mishna lists Yom Kippur as one of the two happiest days of the year.Yom Kippur is not a day to beat ourselves up, to knock ourselves further down.We are here to confront our mistakes, to think about failures and the times we have fallen, but to use them to give us the momentum, the energy, and the knowledge of how to fly.Your fall turns into your uplift, into flight.

In Steve Jobs Commencement Speech to Stanfords Graduating Class of 2005, he retold his story of getting fired from the company he created at the age of 30. It was the most devastating setback of his life. He fell and he fell fast. Though it could have destroyed him, Jobs explained to the graduates that getting publicly fired turned out to bethe best thing that could have happened to him.

Losing his position and success as the leader of Apple opened him up to express his creativity more freely. He started a company called NeXT, helped launch Pixar, reclaimed his role as CEO of Apple, and the rest is history. Failure opened Steve Jobs up to express himself more freely and forced him to create his way out of his rock bottom into the super-success he enjoyed at Apple. As he explained to the graduates: It was awful tasting medicine, but I guess the patient needed it.

J.K. Rowling has sold more than 500 million books and is one of the wealthiest women in the world, but in a commencement speech of her own she described that she needed to fall before she was able to fly. She described how at the time of her own graduation from college, her greatest fear was failurea fear that became reality seven years later as she struggled through single-parenthood, unemployment, and poverty all at the same time.

Rock bottom became the solid foundation on which I rebuilt my life.

Failure, she said, revealed her true character:I stopped pretending to myself that I was anything other than what I was, and began to direct all my energy into finishing the only work that mattered to me I was set free, because my greatest fear had been realized, and I was still alive, and I still had a daughter whom I adored, and I had an old typewriter and a big idea. And so rock bottom became the solid foundation on which I rebuilt my life.

We make amends with ourselves not by excusing our fall but by transforming it into momentum to give us lift. The world gives us our fill of fear, worry and anxiousness. Lets resolve to change from love and longing, from lift.

We have made mistakes, we have fallen down sometimes in anger or outrage, sometimes in judgment and sometimes in envy.Yom Kippur is not about beating ourselves up, staying down, feeling sad, somber or guilty.

Consider what went wrong, why it went wrong, and use that knowledge to learn from it, to gain lift, to take flight and to ensure it doesnt happen again. We dont need to sell that many books or build a revolutionary company to achieve success in our lives. All we need is to get up after we have fallen and take flight.

Excerpt from:

Why Bats Sleep Upside Down and The Secret of Yom Kippur - aish.com - Aish.com

Fall in St. Louis means it’s time to embrace the Jewishness of the pumpkin – – St. Louis Jewish Light

Jordan Palmer, Chief Digital Content OfficerPublished September 27, 2022

Dear Reader,

Fall has officially begun, and it appears the summer heat that has endured here in St. Louis is finally gone. Its time now to think about fall-like things, Rosh Hashanah, Yom, Kippur, long sleeve shirts and sweaters, colorful leaves, October baseball and of course pumpkins.

Pumpkins? Yes, pumpkins. Yes, for two reasons. First, this weekend is the opening of pick-your-own pumpkin season at Eckerts Farms, and because pumpkins have played a very important role in Jewish life long before they became associated with fall events like Halloween and holidays like Thanksgiving.

In the 16th century, one of the first crops brought back from the New World to Europe was the pumpkin. The gourd was easy to grow and stored well during cold winters. In her book The Book of Jewish Food, Claudia Roden writes that since it first appeared in Italy, pumpkin has been associated with the Jews.

Ravioli filled with pumpkin a familiar dish to anyone who frequents Italian restaurants at this time of year was originally a Sephardic creation. Italian Jews also developed recipes for pumpkin puree, pumpkin flan, and pumpkin fritters, a Hanukkah delicacy, wrote Roden.

Pumpkins are featured in many Sephardic recipes. It is tradition, among Sephardic Jews, to eat something containing pumpkin for Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year.

According to MyJewishLearning.com,many Sephardic communities developed their own pumpkin specialties. A jam or sweet spread made with pumpkin was common throughout the Sephardic world, especially as a Rosh Hashanah delicacy. Pumpkin was also commonly used in soups and stews, just as it is today. In addition to these ubiquitous dishes, each Sephardic community adapted pumpkin which is nothing if not versatile to its own cuisine and paired it with the ingredients available to them.

Leah Koenig, the author of Modern Jewish Cooking, writes that early acceptance of the pumpkin by Jews was important for the future of New World foods.

Sometimes, Jewish communities inadvertently helped normalize unfamiliar ingredients and helped usher them into wider acceptance over time, writes Koenig. Not only was this true for pumpkin, but for many other New World vegetables as well, from artichokes to tomatoes.

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Though pumpkins are not mentioned in the Torah specifically, they do appear a handful of times in the Mishnah and the Talmud.

According to Jteach.org, in the Talmud, Tractate Sukkah 56b, Abaye said: A young pumpkin (in hand) is better than a full grown one (in the field).

Talmud, Tractate Berachot 48a Rabbah said to [Abaye and Rava], To whom do we bless [i.e. say Grace After Meals]? They replied, The All-merciful.

And where does the All-merciful dwell? Rava pointed upwards to the ceiling; Abaye went outside and pointed towards the heavens. Rabbah said to them, Both of you are Rabbis; for that is what the proverb says, Every pumpkin is known by its stem.

Mishnah Shabbat 17:6 (about actions which are permissible on Shabbat) If a stone sits in a pumpkin one may draw water with it [the pumpkin] if the stone does not fall out, but one may not draw water with it [if the stone] does [fall out]. [If] a vine-branch is tied to a pitcher, water may be drawn with it on Shabbat.

So, as we kick off the year 5783, dont forget to embrace this fun part of our heritage both as Americans and as Jews. In honor of how our Sephardic ancestors used pumpkins in a wide variety of dishes, I hope we can get creative this year with how we use and think about pumpkins. How about a new twist on pumpkin pie, or pumpkin bread? Please keep me posted if you do.

The pick-your-own season run throughout October. Guests can visit any of the Eckerts farms to pick their perfect Halloween pumpkins. Eckerts Millstadt location has additional attractions of private bonfire sites and haunted wagon rides.

Belleville, Millstadt & Grafton Farms |Select Days from Sept. 24-Oct. 30

For more information on Eckerts,visit the website.

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Fall in St. Louis means it's time to embrace the Jewishness of the pumpkin - - St. Louis Jewish Light