The team who created Amazon’s warehouse robots returns with a new robot named Chuck – CNBC

Currently, the start-up's software connects to retailers' and shippers' systems to get data about what orders are coming in the door, and where items are located in a facility. The Chuck also takes in data from on-board sensors to navigate within centimeters of a desired item on a shelf.

The robots could become smarter over time, and help the managers and operators of warehouses identify areas for improvement, essentially managing foot traffic and placement of inventory on shelves.

Dubois told CNBC, "When researchers truly figure out grasping, and things like that, there's also a real opportunity to put an arm on Chuck, and start to use him to help people with different kinds of work."

The company's competition includes Locus Robotics, Fetch Robotics and a handful of other more niche systems designed to help workers in warehouses move goods around more efficiently.

6 River Systems recently attracted $15 million in new venture funding, Dubois said. The round was led by Norwest Venture Partners, joined by Eclipse Ventures and iRobot, the company that created the Roomba vacuum.

Norwest's Matt Howard said one reason his firm invested in 6 River Systems is because its technology can be installed without any changes to a warehouse.

"You can start using the Chuck without pouring in any concrete, or installing cameras and sensors or special networks all over. This will be accessible for small to medium-sized enterprises, which are essential for making deliveries over that last mile," he explained.

While the CEO did not have permission to name early customers of 6 River Systems, he said they already include half a dozen publicly traded companies including massive department stores, big box retailers and third-party logistics businesses. He expects the installed base for Chuck will more than double in the next three months.

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The team who created Amazon's warehouse robots returns with a new robot named Chuck - CNBC

Princeton graduate student teams advance in robotics, intelligent systems competitions – Princeton University

Two teams of Princeton graduate students are making strong showings in national robotics competitions this year. The teams are combining advances in computation with those in sensing technology.

One group is joining with teammates at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology later this month for the third annual Amazon Robotics Challengein Nagoya, Japan. The challenge asks teams to develop a robot that can recognize various objects that it has never seen before, pick them up and pack them in a box. The team finished third overall in last year's challenge. The second Princeton team is a finalist in Amazon's ongoing Alexa Prize competition, which challenges teams to create software that converses naturally with people.

The Alexa team is plumbing methods to understand and work with language, while the Robotics Challenge team is pushing the boundaries of computer vision and image processing.

"I'm excited to see Princeton teams leading in robotics competitions," said Jennifer Rexford, the Gordon Y. S. Wu Professor in Engineering and chair of the Department of Computer Science. "The transition of robotics from controlled environments, like factories, to the complex human world brings tremendous opportunity to serve society, while also raising difficult technical challenges. Princeton is tackling these challenges by bringing advances in sensing and computation together to allow future robots to understand the world around them and interact safely in human society.

Princeton graduate students are developing a software system that can engagingly converse with humans on a variety of topics. Team members, from left,Niranjani Prasad, Ari Seff, Karan Singh and Daniel Suo work on the project in the computer science building.

Photo by

David Kelly Crow for the Office of Engineering Communications

During a recent demonstration in their lab, Shuran Song and Andy Zeng held up a small black metal-mesh basket to demonstrate the challenge of creating accurate robotic vision. It was an everyday object, the kind of thing used to hold pencils on a desk. But as Zeng slowly spun the small basket in this hand, he said, "It may not seem like it, but this is actually one of the more challenging objects to handle.

"This is because the black reflective surface makes it hard for 3-D sensors to see," Zeng explained. "Such surfaces appear often in our everyday environments, but are less addressed in recent computer vision research. By using various objects with special properties like this one, the competition forces us to tackle challenging vision problems for real-world scenarios."

In a video the team made last year, viewers can see a robot painted Princeton orange look into a red container to identify an object using a sensor on the robotic arm. After determining it is a coffee can, the robot cranes down into the crate, uses high-powered suction cups to pick up the can, then lifts its arm upward and places the coffee can on to a shelf.

Princetons team is led by Zeng and Song, both graduate students in computer science, and their faculty adviser is Thomas Funkhouser, the David M. Siegel Professor of Computer Science. While the Princeton students work on building an algorithm for identifying objects, their teammates from MIT are working on manipulation, or using the robotic arm and hand to grasp and move the objects.

This will be the second year the team has taken part in the challenge, which originally was known as the Amazon Picking Challenge. The students said that although the algorithm they built last year was accurate, the two teams that finished ahead of them built a robot that worked more quickly. Our biggest weakness was speed, Song said.

They are working to solve that problem by installing more cameras to supplement the camera on the robotic arm. With that change, along with an improved algorithm, hopefully we can obtain a speedup similar to the teams that performed well last year, Zeng said.

Last year, the team was given a list of objects in advance that the robot might be asked to identify, grasp and move. But this year, the challenge is harder: Participants will only have that information a half-hour in advance. That has required them to create an algorithm that is more versatile, the students said.

We have to adapt our algorithm to be versatile enough so that it can still recognize these new objects with less time, Zeng said.

Since childhood, Cyril Zhang has dreamed of simulating consciousness in a machine. Although scientists still debate whether creating a truly conscious machine is even possible, for now the doctoral student in computer science is working on something that is "perhaps as close as you can get."

Beginning in early October, Zhang and 12 other graduate students in computer science began working on a software system designed to converse coherently and engagingly with humans on a variety of popular topics. The effort is part of Amazon's Alexa Prize competition, which requires international teams of university students to create software that can carry on such conversation for at least 20 minutes using Alexa, Amazons voice service, as a starting point. The winning team will receive a $500,000 award as well as a $1 million research grant for their department.

In November, Amazon notified the Princeton team that it was one of 12 university groups chosen to be sponsored to participate in the competition, bringing a $100,000 stipend. Since then, team members have been meeting every Thursday with their faculty adviser, Sanjeev Arora, the Charles C. Fitzmorris Professor of Computer Science, to coordinate their respective tasks.

Software that emulates human behavior is known as a socialbot. The Princeton team chose to name its socialbot Pixie, as the most concise combination of Princeton and Alexa that they could devise, according to team member Daniel Suo.

The team grew out of a weekly graduate student reading group on the topic of deep learning. Zhang described the team as outsiders since most of the students do not specialize in natural language processing research, but have experience in other fields such as machine learning theory, deep learning, computer vision, robotics or distributed systems.

Our simultaneous strength and weakness is that we come from a variety of research backgrounds, Zhang said. What that means is that Im optimistic we can come up with something that may never have occurred to someone who has spent a long time in the natural language processing field. But at the same time, we are definitely spending a lot of effort getting oriented to techniques that researchers in the field are already completely comfortable with.

Emulating human conversation has long been a challenge in software design. Humans communicate in ambiguous terms, and correctly interpreting words and sentences depends on context, common sense and some understanding of the world. Because computers lack such prior knowledge and rely on precision, programming computers to make sense of ambiguities is extremely difficult.

For any particular input, the bot has to determine is the user trying to talk about a specific topic? Is it more just general chitchat? Which sources might be needed for generating a suitable response? said team member Ari Seff.

The team also faces the broader challenge of designing a coherent personality that will entertain the user and keep the conversation natural and fluid.

The Amazon competition challenges us to think about conversation from a social perspective, Suo said. It would get boring to talk to a bot that just told endless one-liners or just answered fact-based questions. But what about language cues indicating how interested or bored someone is? Can we guide the conversation to a new area rather than just react to the user?

Members of the team expressed excitement at the collaborative nature of the project and the possibility of new and disruptive ideas growing from it.

It's an opportunity for us to build something together, but to also learn from each other, Suo said.

In April, entrant teams received feedback from real-life Amazon Echo users on the success of their socialbot based on the relevance, coherence, interest and speed of the conversation. The final prize winners will be announced in November.

If we win or if we dont win is not the point, team member Davit Buniatyan said. The fact is that this research is advancing the future of machine learning.

The Pixie team members are: Oluwatosin Adewale, Alex Beatson, Davit Buniatyan, Jason Ge, Misha Khodak, Holden Lee, Niranjani Prasad, Nikunj Saunshi, Ari Seff, Karan Singh, Daniel Suo, Kiran Vodrahalli and Cyril Zhang.

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Princeton graduate student teams advance in robotics, intelligent systems competitions - Princeton University

Cyber Tips for a Plugged-In Summer Vacation – Tech.Co

The summer months are often the most popular time for Americans to take vacations. However, as we shift our focus from every day routines to booking flights and scheduling time off, cybersecurity may quickly fall to the bottom of our list of concerns.

According to a recent survey by University of Phoenix College of Information Systems & Technology, only half of Americans worry about cybersecurity risks while on vacation, and the majority said they do little to keep their devices secure when they travel.

Unfortunately, todays digital age places our personal information at a higher risk of being breached, placing an increased onus on us to take the proper cybersecurity steps. Lowering our guard when we are on vacation or away from home can leave us vulnerable to cyber threats. But, by taking a proactive attitude and knowing how hackers attempt to steal information, we can stay secure. Here are three tips to keep your data safe when traveling or on vacation:

It may be tempting to use free public Wi-Fi networks in places like hotel lobbies, coffee shops and visitor centers while on vacation, but hackers may frequent these places looking to steal your personal information. Accessing bank accounts and other sites that store personal information through public Wi-Fi are actions that should be avoided at all costs unless proper security measures are in place. Before leaving, set up an internet data plan or personal hotspot through your cell phone provider to ensure that your most important information is protected when you need to access the internet.

While sharing travel plans and memories of your trips on social media is a large part of vacation today, it can encourage cyber attackers to steal your information when youre out of town and distracted. Everyday actions, like keeping location services turned on, uploading photos and tweeting about flight delays, can lead hackers to your social media sites to find information that can be used for phishing emails or to break into your home. To avoid this, wait until youre back home to share details about your trip on social media. If youre traveling with friends or family, refrain from tagging them in social media posts while youre away to help them avoid more advanced scams like phishing emails asking for money.

Traveling with out-of-date security can leave you open to unwanted breaches, yet less than half of respondents to the University of Phoenix survey said they take security measures when traveling, like disabling Bluetooth, changing or updating passwords, encrypting data or updating antivirus software. Before you leave for your trip, update your devices so they have the most recent system updates, antivirus software and firewall protections, and double check that all devices and sensitive information are password or two-step-verification protected. Once youre on vacation, make sure all devices are accounted for at all times, and invest in a privacy screen to keep information safe from curious eyes.

Todays connected world means we must be more proactive about cybersecurity. By following these simple security steps, youll have greater peace of mind when on vacation.

Read more tips on staying secure on your devices at TechCo

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Cyber Tips for a Plugged-In Summer Vacation - Tech.Co

Data is key to online video, says Little Dot boss – IBC365 (registration)

Its not surprising that Little Dot Studios growth mirrors the surge in video consumption around the world. Established just over four years ago, the company was set up to by UK-based TV and film production and distribution giant All3Media to help the broadcasting industry grow their audiences and communities on social platforms using video.

If you go back to 2013, the main focus was on deals with the likes of Netflix, Amazon and Hulu to make money through the licensing of content, says Little Dot co-founder and Chief Executive Andy Taylor.

But YouTube was much harder; they needed to hire people and build their own audience. And even if they succeeded they didnt make much money, so very few broadcasters did anything.

Broadcasters are more innovative than they are given credit for - Andy Taylor

I had a view that even if the money was modest compared to deals with firms like Netflix, broadcasters would have to embrace YouTube and Facebook because they need to engage with younger audiences and their ability to market shows declining, so they needed to go on to new platforms.

Video growth

According to Ericsson, the amount of video being consumed over mobile networks around the world rose from just under 1,000 petabytes per month in 2013 to 7,500 petabytes per month this year.

Little Dots clients range from FremantleMedia to the England and Wales Cricket Board, and it has created content such as the Leap of Faith stunt (see image) for Formula E and the Channel 4s short form series Drones in Forbidden Zones.

It now counts 2.5billion views per month of its content on YouTube. And having launched with four staff members it now employs some 100 people, 60 of whom are editors and graphic designers making clips for the programmes such as chat show The Graham Norton Show or complications of the best moments of Gordon Ramseys Kitchen Nightmares.

Taylor explains that each video is tailored to the platform on which it is published.

For Facebook we use a lot of graphics, and the cut would be different on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

Taylor refers to the growth in mobile video consumption as an explosion, with broadcasters leaping into the commissioning of short form content for their on-demand platforms. And while some may treat short form as a testing ground for ideas that could be turned into long form series for linear broadcast, the likes of Channel 4 treat it as standalone content to generate views and therefore more interest from advertisers for their online platforms.

Andy Taylor on YouTubers moving into TV

We are not a traditional multichannel network (MCN) that represent YouTubers, but when we do produce content we will often look at new emerging talent.

Lots are doing very nicely on YouTube, and while some may want to [move on to TV] they might not have the talent. TV requires a different level of expertise; speaking to a camera in a bedroom is very different to having a full crew around.

So can broadcasters learn anything from the online upstarts? While TV feels competitive, it has limited bandwidth; there are still only hundreds of channels whereas online there are millions of YouTube and Facebook pages, so the great online publishers are just incredibly agile and very data driven.

Unless they spend significant time worrying about how a video will be seen no one will see it, no matter how good it is. That makes all of us in this space incredibly data driven, and the great online innovators have combined skills that blend data audience understanding with creative gut instinct.

Little Dots approach is to produce video around a genre, keeping in mind why a site like the Huffington Post would chose to embed a particular video and making sure they use terms that are highly searched for while creating something that will keep a viewer watching beyond the first few seconds. And for every video it uploads, it can harvest an extraordinary amount of data.

Broadcasters are more innovative than that are given credit for, but they dont have that level of data. We have to be so hungry to get a view because it is so hard.

Broadcasters are finding it increasingly hard to keep hold of younger viewers. We search out new movements and genres and find out what younger audiences going to latch on to. That is hard for broadcasters who predominantly serve older audience and could be at risk of cannibalising their core audience.

Included in Little Dots headcount of 100 are six full time data analysts who sit next to Taylor.

They dont just look at the data, they also look at what Facebook and YouTubes algorithm is doing. These are living, breathing things that need to be monitored because if [online platforms] start to favour a particular type or length of content then we need to change the kind of video we makebroadcasters have tried YouTube in-house but they are usually uploading in a vacuum. We can grow on these platforms because we can upload videos that we know will become visible.

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Data is key to online video, says Little Dot boss - IBC365 (registration)

A recap of the raciest photos from Kim Kardashian, Kylie Jenner and their sisters’ Instagram – GQ India

KendallJenner posted her first nude (again) yesterday. Apicture of hers, featuring the young model laying atop atable, under a chandelier, wearing nothing as cigarettedaintily dangled from between her fingers, showed up on her Instagram account. We say again because the older Jenner sister is notorious for uploading suggestive content toher nine grid before taking it off without warning. Were not sure whether she changes her mind or routinely confuses Instagram for SnapChat, but we suggest that you go and take a look at it before its gone.

ThoughKendalls nudefie couldnt quite break the Internet, her siblings have more than enough material to help her out, and we haveproof. Its time to rewind and review the raciest offerings fromKardashian-Jenners; because if youre trying to figure out why the family is worth $450 million, youre about to get some answers.

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A recap of the raciest photos from Kim Kardashian, Kylie Jenner and their sisters' Instagram - GQ India

SSC CGL Admit Card 2017 : Tier 1 western, central, northern and eastern region examination declared – Newsfolo

SSC CGL admit card 2017 has been released for the level Tier I exams for western, central, northern, nwr and eastern region on the official website. The Department has released the admit cards for different regions. And the examination of level Tier I will be conducted from August 1, 2017, to August 20, 2017. Students who have applied for the examination of Tier I can check their results on the official website of the Staff Selection Commission i.e.,ssc.nic.in. After the exams of Tier, I department will release the admit cards of Tier-II exam that is expected to be conducted from 10th and 11th November 2017. And the SSC CGL 2017 Tier-III exam will be conducted from 21st January 2018.

Now the admit cards for the combine graduate level Tier I are available to download on the official website of Staff Selection Commission i.e., ssc.nic.in. The Staff Selection Commission released combine graduate level Tier I admit cards for different regions. To download admit cards candidates need to provide their registration number, roll number and the date of birth. And need to download admit card for the entry ticket at the examination hall. Candidates who want to appear for the Tier I exam have to log in the official website of SSC and visit the link provided on this page. Then after filling up the required details download and take out the print out of your admit cards for the future reference.

Candidates just keep in mind that due to heavy traffic the sites may be slow or crash. So, in that case, ask the candidates to keep refreshing their regional sites. Although some of the websites have not uploaded admit cards yet. However, the process of uploading is underway. Soon other alternatives sites will upload admit cards to download. The are around 1, 80,365 candidates who have been eligible for the SSC CGL Tier I examination.

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SSC CGL Admit Card 2017 : Tier 1 western, central, northern and eastern region examination declared - Newsfolo

Goop doctor says she’s not really Goop’s doctor, calls site a caricature – Ars Technica

A doctor who appeared to vouch for and defend Gwyneth Paltrows high-profile lifestyle and e-commerce site, Goop, now says that she does not see herself as a Goop doctor and would not endorse the site, according to an interview with Stat.

The post was written in response to a wave of online criticism from journalists, medical professionals, and patient advocates, particularlyblogger Dr. Jen Gunter, an Ob/Gyn who has written often about Goop.

Under a heading that included our doctors, Romm appeared firmly connected to Goop and its mission. But, in an interview published online Thursday on Stat, Romm said she doesnt see herself as one of Goops doctors and doesnt pay enough attention to know whats on the site. She refused to endorse Goop and, in fact, expressed criticism of it. Romm suggested that the site is a caricature of everything alternative health for women. She advised the Goop team to re-evaluate all of the sites products and recommendations with the help of doctors.

I cant endorse Goop, in that... just because [products are] natural or organic, doesnt mean that theyre beneficial for women, she told Stat. Just because it hasnt been proven harmful and its natural doesnt mean its safe. We cant just say that thats sort of the default position.

You cant just say its better than conventional medicine. If its wrong, its wrong.

Romm explained that she was sympathetic to women who are dissatisfied with conventional medicine. And she stressed that she wasnt disavowing Goop and said that there was no justification to dismiss alternative medicine in general. But she noted that just because women seek alternatives doesnt mean alternatives are good.

That said, Romm, a Yale-educated doctor, sells her own line of proprietary herbal supplements, includingAdrena soothe and Adrena nourish. She also espouses detoxing, which is not supported by science.

In the Stat interview, Dr. Romm said she wasnt concerned that her medical credentials might appear to lend support to unproven and unscientific theories and products, such as her own or those on Goop. She replied that she essentially saw herself as an independent contributor to the site and was open to patients trying harmless products that arent too expensive if they want.

She also seemed comfortable with the for-profit aspect of the health advice she and Goop offer. Goop is certainly commercial, Romm said, adding I have to make a living, too.

Dr. Romm elaborated:

I think Gwyneth Paltrow was a fabulous actress in her day of acting, and Im not a sort of advocate or antagonist of her work. I understand that she is probably a very decent person, trying to do good work, and [she] does things that feel meaningful to her. And, yes, theres a commercial aspect to it, [but] theres nothing that doesnt have a commercial aspect to it, unless youre a saint doing medical work.

The interview ended with Romm noting that drug companies also make lots of money.

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Goop doctor says she's not really Goop's doctor, calls site a caricature - Ars Technica

Pyrrolizidine alkaloids in tea, herbal infusions and food supplements – EU News

Exposure to pyrrolizidine alkaloids in food, in particular for frequent and high consumers of tea and herbal infusions, is a possible long-term concern for human health due to their potential carcinogenicity, say EFSAs experts.

The consumption of food supplements based on pyrrolizidine alkaloid-producing plants could also result in exposure levels causing short-term toxicity resulting in adverse health effects.

EFSA has updated its 2011 advice on the risks for human and animal health from pyrrolizidine alkaloids, a large group of toxins produced by different plant species that can unintentionally enter the food chain.

The European Commission requested the updated risk assessment, which takes account of exposure estimates using more recent data on the levels of these toxins in honey, tea, herbal infusions and food supplements.

In 2011 EFSA concluded there were possible long-term health concerns for toddlers and children who are high consumers of honey, the only food category for which sufficient data were then available.

EFSAs experts identified 17 pyrrolizidine alkaloids in food and feed that should continue to be monitored and recommended further studies on the toxicity and carcinogenicity of those most commonly found in food.

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Pyrrolizidine alkaloids in tea, herbal infusions and food supplements - EU News

How-to health food guide – City Pulse

Tips and tricks for those looking for a healthy boost

Health food isnt just a trend, its the new norm. As mainstream grocery stores incorporate organic sections into their floorplans, its becoming clearer that were in the midst of an organic revolution.

Audrey McDonough, supplement manager at the Better Health Store in Frandor Shopping Center, shared some popular healthy foods, a few personal favorites and unique perspectives on a few mainstays for the health conscience consumer.

Healthy fats The health food community is all about fat right now, and Im all about it too. Coconut oil, MCT oil, grass fed butter, grass fed ghee and olive oil can be really healthy for you and can make your body actually burn fat and calories more often.

Coconut water Coconut water the perfect sports drink. It has all your electrolytes and no added sugars. Its a great way for someone like an athlete to move over to something thats natural, and away who from those crappy, electrolyte drinks that are full of sugars and dye. They make flavored coconut water now if you dont like the way it tastes.

Kombucha Kombucha is fermented green or black tea full of probiotic bacteria essential to your gut health and can help your brain and immune system. The probiotic culture ferments the tea and makes it fizzy, bubbly and yummy. Its a great alternative for people who want to stop drinking pop and have slightly adventurous taste buds.

Turmeric Turmeric is probably one of our most popular supplements because everyone needs some sort of anti-inflammatory. It works best when its paired with black pepper which allows it to stay in the bloodstream a lot longer and do its work.

Apple cider vinegar Apple cider vinegar is awesome. It can help alkalize the body and if you take it after meals it will minimize the increase in your blood sugar and help you burn fat.

I hear a lot of people brag they can drink it straight, which isnt good dilute apple cider vinegar when youre ingesting it because its full of acetic acid which is bad for your tooth enamel. One teaspoon to 8 ounces of water is a good ratio.

Gluten Free

If you have to go gluten free, I suggest cutting out the groups that contain gluten. You shouldnt have a huge portion of your diet made up of gluten free food because a lot of the main ingredients in the gluten free versions are made of starches like rice flower and potato starch that turn into sugar, or contain a lot of sugar.

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How-to health food guide - City Pulse

Are You Consuming the Right Kind of Vitamin D? – Vital Updates

Not all vitamin D is created equal. Thats what a new study found, and the results may have significant implications for public health strategies seeking to boost levels of the important vitamin.

The study, appearing in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, found that food supplements containing one type of the vitamin D3 were far more effective at raising vitamin levels in the body compared to supplements containing another form, vitamin D2.

Our findings show that vitamin D3 is twice as effective as D2 in raising vitamin D levels in the body, which turns current thinking about the two types of vitamin D on its head, said lead authorDr. Laura Tripkovicfrom the University of Surrey.

Both substances are found naturally, but they come from different sources. Vitamin D3 derives from animal products, while D2 comes from plants.

For the study, researchers assessed total vitamin D levels in 335 women over a two-year span. To gauge the effectiveness of the different vitamins, they had one group of women consume juice or eat a biscuit containing D3 and the other group do the same with D2. The experiment lasted over the course of two winters.

Related:Vitamin D May Ease Sunburns by Reducing Skin Damage

After the trial ended, the women who consumed D3 had about a 75 percent increase in circulating levels of vitamin D in their bodies, compared to a 34 percent boost among those who consumed D2.

The study may overturn current dietary guidelines, which consider both forms of vitamin D to have equal health benefits.

This is a very exciting discovery which will revolutionize how the health and retail sector views vitamin D, said professor Susan Lanham-New, Head of theDepartment of Nutritional Sciencesat the University of Surrey.

In regions where sunlight is scarce, such as parts of North America and the United Kingdom, people rely on vitamin D supplements to ensure healthy levels of the vital nutrient. Healthy vitamin D levels are linked to disease-fighting prowess, bone health and other important factors.

People may want to reconsider their dietary choices in light of the new findings.

Those who consume D3 through fish, eggs or vitamin D3 containing supplements are twice as more likely to raise their vitamin D status than when consuming vitamin D2-rich foods, such as mushrooms, vitamin D2 fortified bread or vitamin D2 containing supplements, helping to improve their long term health, said Tripkovic.

Related:Vitamin D Deficiency May Cause Early Menopause

Vitamin D deficiency is a serious matter, but this will help people make a more informed choice about what they can eat or drink to raise their levels through their diet, said Lanham-New.

The difference in vitamin D fortification is particularly important for pregnant women, notes a previous study from the University of Surrey.

The importance of vitamin D sufficiency should not be underestimated. It is well-known to be good for our musculoskeletal systems, but our research shows that if levels are low in expectant mothers, it can affect the development of their children in their early years of life, said Dr. Andrea Darling, who led a separate study on vitamin D and health outcomes related to pregnancy.

Vitamin D is found in oily fish (e.g. salmon, sardines, mackerel and fresh tuna) and in small amounts of red meat, eggs, fortified fat spreads and some breakfast cereals. However, unless a large portion of oily fish (100g) is eaten daily it is difficult to get the recommended daily intake of 10 micrograms per day from food alone, said Darling.

Richard Scott is a health care reporter focusing on health policy and public health. Richard keeps tabs on national health trends from his Philadelphia location and is an active member of the Association of Health Care Journalists.

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Are You Consuming the Right Kind of Vitamin D? - Vital Updates

GAO: Coast Guard lacks vital strategy for funding, acquisitions – DefenseNews.com

WASHINGTON As the Coast Guard continues to push for funding to modernize an aging fleet and handle a lack of personnel, a government watchdog agency is calling attention to the services serious need for strategic planning.

The Coast Guard has been producing five-year capital investment plans, or CIP, for Congress since 2012, but the GAO found that these reports are not accurate at a time when forward-looking strategy is vital.

The CIP does not prioritize future acquisitions, resulting in projections that are much larger than requested or received funding, the GAO said.

Senior Coast Guard officials have said the service needs $2 billion for acquisitions while in the White House budget, the service requested $1.1 billion for fiscal year 2017 and $1.2 billion for fiscal year 2018, according to the GAO.

To address this, the service has reduced its capabilities and pushed acquisitions to the future without measuring the negative effects or a realistic, prioritized plan for the future.

Since 2014, the GAO has recommended that the Coast Guard develop a 20-year plan to identify all necessary acquisitions and the funding needed for fielding them. The Department of Homeland Security agreed with the advice but has not produced the plan or said when it will be available.

This GAO recommendation comes after a dramatic response to a presidential budget proposal that slashed the Coast Guards budget by $1 billion. The reaction from advocates and lawmakers spurred U.S. President Donald Trumps budget chief to go back to the drawing board and throw out the cut.

The Coast Guardsonly active heavy icebreaker, the Polar Star, is nearing the end of its expected service life and the service plans to implement a limited service life extension estimated to cost $75 million.

However, there are concerns that even with the extended service life of the Polar Star, the funding for the acquisition would coincide with 2019 funding requests for the acquisition of an offshore patrol cutter, a massive acquisition that would occupy up to two-thirds of the budget. According to GAO, the Coast Guard has not said how it will prioritize these acquisitions.

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GAO: Coast Guard lacks vital strategy for funding, acquisitions - DefenseNews.com

ONE Aviation Receives FAA Approval Pertaining to Eclipse 500/550 Extended Tip Tank Configuration – AviationPros.com

Oshkosh, WI Wednesday, July 26, 2017 - ONE Aviation announced today, at EAA AirVenture 2017, FAA approval of an unrestricted increase in the structural life limit of the Eclipse 550 and the Eclipse 500 in the extended tip tank configuration to 20,000 flight hours or 20,000 cycles, whichever occurs first. Previously the life limit had been 10,000 cycles, 10,000 hours, or 10 years, without enrollment in a life extension maintenance and inspection program. Completion of long term fatigue and damage tolerance testing of the aircraft structure and materials resulted in this change.

When maintained in accordance with the Aircraft Maintenance Manual (AMM), the completion of the full-scale aircraft level testing, and the large scale material coupon testing, demonstrated the aircraft structure has fatigue and damage tolerance life, in excess of 20,000 cycles.

The increase in the life limit is automatic to existing and future Eclipse Jet owners, with no additional action necessary beyond continuing to perform the AMM required structural inspections.

The FAA approved changes to the aircraft life limits greatly simplifies the ability of Eclipse Jet owners and operators to benefit from the extensive investment made by ONE Aviation in structural life testing, said Brent Christner, Senior Director of Engineering at Eclipse Aerospace.

Currently these life limit changes are applicable to United States N registered aircraft. Eclipse is working to get the new life limits accepted by other civil aviation authorities.

About ONE Aviation ONE Aviation is a global manufacturing corporation, which markets, produces, and delivers the Eclipse 550 twin-engine jet, as it develops the Eclipse Project Canada and the Kestrel K350 single-engine turboprop. In addition, ONE Aviation will design, acquire, and build additional aircraft complementary to its core product line. ONE Aviation also provides engineering, maintenance, service, and support for the Eclipse 500 and Eclipse 550 fleet. For more information, please visit http://www.ONEaviation.aero.

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ONE Aviation Receives FAA Approval Pertaining to Eclipse 500/550 Extended Tip Tank Configuration - AviationPros.com

GAO: Coast Guard Needs to Present More Details on Icebreaker, Offshore Patrol Cutter Acquisition – USNI News

The Coast Guard needs to present a 20-year fleet modernization plan that identifies what it intends to buy and what they project the costs to be, particularly in light of current plans to buy heavy icebreakers and offshore patrol cutters at about the same time, the Government Accountability Office reported Tuesday.

While not issuing new recommendations on how to proceed, GAO repeated findings of a 2014 study calling for the same approach. Then, the study was looking at projected costs for command, control, computers, communications, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance for fleet modernization of vessels and aircraft. The Department of Homeland Security and the Coast Guard accepted the recommendations.

This study, while not offering new recommendations, deals specifically with the potential risk of going ahead with the replacement for Polar Star and buying, building and launching of the Offshore Patrol Cutter, a program projected to cost $12.1 billion through 2032.

A Coast Guard spokesperson referred USNI News to its response in the GAO report when contacted.

In its latest study, GAO acknowledged the Coast Guard has been submitting a five-year Capital Investment Plan annually to Congress, but these submissions do not match budget realities in that tradeoffs are not included. It added that in the 20-year plan all acquisitions needed to maintain current service levels and the fiscal resources to build the identified assets as well as tradeoffs in light of funding restraints need to be identified.

On replacing USCGC Polar Star (WAGB-10) , the services only heavy icebreaker, GAO reported the Coast Guard has not completed an official cost estimate of a limited service life extension program to keep it operational until a replacement is in the fleet.

Adm. Paul Zukunft, commandant, has ruled out trying to bring back Polar Sea to duty. In an address at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington, D.C., think tank in May, he said the Coast Guards long-range thinking calls for six icebreakers three heavy and three medium.

Consequently, the Coast Guard expedited its acquisition of new heavy icebreakers with delivery of the first polar icebreaker scheduled in 2023.

GAO identified the risk as potentially coming from the accelerated schedules need to have the required acquisition documents ready to award the contract for the heavy icebreaker in 2019 and fully funded in that year. The preliminary cost estimate is $1.15 billion.

The Coast Guard has not articulated how it will prioritize its acquisition needs given its Offshore Patrol Cutter is expected to absorb half to two-thirds of its annual acquisition funding requests based on recent funding history starting in 2018, GAO said in its study.

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Beyond the colours on canvas – The Hans India

Watercolours of five-Bengali artists make for the soul of the ongoing exhibition at Kalakriti Art Gallery. Art often grows based on personal experiences and therefore the title Souls of Wide Walls was chosen as a way of looking at individual proclivities through the creative expression of these five maestros.

The exhibition showcases the recent and gives a glimpse of past works, which reflect years of hard work and efforts in different styles, but similar medium.

The five artists includeJogen Chowdhury, Sanjay Bhattacharya, Paresh Maity, Samir Mondal and Avijit Dutta. Artist Jogen Chowdhury is known for his ability to successfully marry traditional imagery with the zeitgeist of contemporary painting, in a skillful blend of an urbane self-awareness and a highly localised Bengali influence. His early works show an attention to figuration that carries through in his current pieces.

Artist Sanjay Bhattacharyas involvement with the streets of Calcutta comes through on his artworks, and convey a story in themselves. Some of his works are most endearing and refreshing works on Gods Own Country.Watercolours created in the flat mold with sinuous lines and curves are more for fun, to let creative juices flow, an attempt at a serious amalgam of words and lines in art, says Sanjay Bhattacharya.

Another artist, Paresh Maity unveils the viewer with the opportunity to be led into a new invigorating experience of landscapes, essentially a representation of space that radically extends the possibilities of an aesthetic experience. Samir Mondals watercolours bring alive faces, landscapes, flowers, butterflies, animals images that will haunt you, not for their apparent beauty but by their secret power.

His complete mastery over his medium, the way he makes the watercolours move and sway at his touch, the flow and confluence of colours, is the true sign of his genius. Samir is now part of the Global Watercolour Art Movement, his works are part of international art books and magazines.

Avijit Duttas life and art have always been intertwined and existed as a single entity. His curiosity to know the past lives of people and their lifestyle has always been profound, which gets reflected in his paintings repeatedly.

I tried to bring forward all the existing taboos and experiences of the long-lost lives of people , which are somewhat intertwined with my present life, he says. Since its a collection of his journey with these past life stories and its associated taboos hence it is titledMy Private Museum.The art show is on until July 31.

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Beyond the colours on canvas - The Hans India

Renfrew County dietitian recognized by board of health for provincial award – www.insideottawavalley.com/


http://www.insideottawavalley.com/
Renfrew County dietitian recognized by board of health for provincial award
http://www.insideottawavalley.com/
This document highlights the inadequacies of food charity such as food banks as a response to food insecurity, and calls for the implementation of a basic income guarantee as an effective, long-term solution to reduce food insecurity rates.

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Renfrew County dietitian recognized by board of health for provincial award - http://www.insideottawavalley.com/

The automation-resistant skills we should nurture – BBC News


BBC News
The automation-resistant skills we should nurture
BBC News
If these jobs can't be automated, and will continue to be necessary into the future, workers with emotional skills will be highly in demand in the coming decades. But, right now, the jobs that depend most on these skills are often badly compensated: a ...

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The automation-resistant skills we should nurture - BBC News

Cisco bugs leave network automation vulnerable to attack – The Register

A slip in certificate handling is one of three bugs in Cisco's Autonomic Networking software.

As its name implies, Autonomic Networking is about reducing the load on network administrators by offering self-management for suitable switches and routers under suitable versions of the IOS operating system.

And then, as they say, the murders began: Autonomous Networking uses infrastructure certificates to verify nodes in the system, and that's where the problem has emerged.

It starts with this advisory: a mistake in infrastructure certificate revocation.

In Cisco IOS XE, the bug could let an unauthenticated, remote autonomic node back into a network after its certificate has been revoked.

That's because the software doesn't transfer certificate revocation lists across Autonomic Control Plane Channels (ACP). An attacker with access to the remote node, even if its certificate has been revoked, can re-insert the revoked node into the autonomic domain.

The bug affects Release 16.x of Cisco IOS XE Software and are configured to use Autonomic Networking.

The only option for affected admins is to manually check that the bad node's certificate has been deleted properly, and then update the Autonomic Networking whitelist file.

The other Autonomic Networking bugs in the collection are an information disclosure vulnerability, and a denial-of-service vulnerability.

In the first, the information disclosure is only available to an unauthenticated, adjacent attacker to view control plane packets in clear text. So far, there's no fix available.

In the second, attackers can crash adjacent IOS and IOS XE Autonomic Networking nodes. Cisco doesn't yet know what causes the bug, but if an attacker captured packets (exploiting the information disclosure bug, for example), they can replay them to reset the ACP channel of the system. Again, users will have to keep an eye out for when a fix lands.

Sponsored: The Joy and Pain of Buying IT - Have Your Say

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Cisco bugs leave network automation vulnerable to attack - The Register

GE’s Jim Fowler embraces the ‘chief automation officer’ role – TechTarget

Jim Fowler, CIO at GE, believes in a couple of certainties: Machines will change how people work and how processes run. To be a competitive force in the machine age, Fowler is pushing his colleagues to see him as something more than the guy who keeps the lights on and the help desk tickets flowing. Instead, he's asked the business leaders to consider him the chief automation officer.

In this SearchCIO video interview filmed at the recent MIT Sloan CIO Symposium in Cambridge, Mass., Fowler described what he sees as the primary responsibilities of a chief automation officer. He also talked about how artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning and the company's Predix platform, which collects and analyzes data from the industrial internet of things, help him fulfill the role.

Read excerpts of the interview below, or click on the player to listen to this interview in its entirety.

Who owns the AI budget at GE?

Jim Fowler: Inside GE -- for the GE component of AI -- that's in my budget. There's also a GE for customer component where we've made an acquisition this year in the AI space. And that actually sits in the commercial team's budget. I'm their biggest customer. I own the spending that we have there, as well as with other AI vendors.

What are you spending that budget on?

Fowler: We're looking at how we can automate. That's the other big change happening inside [IT's] role: I've told my business leaders to stop thinking about the CIO as the person running the network, the PCs, etc. Those are table stakes. Instead, think about this person as the chief automation officer who should be helping point out how work is going to change over the next 10 years, how machines are going to tell people what to do more than people telling machines what to do, and how they are going to help you see where productivity will come from as we go through that automation market. AI and machine learning are at the heart of all of that.

How are you measuring the ROI on those investments?

Fowler: For me, it's broader than artificial intelligence -- it's technology in general. And when I look at the application of technology inside the company, the measures are pretty simple. There are three metrics that my variable compensation is based on: The first is operating profit driven by productivity; I have a $700 million target for productivity this year that I have to meet. There's also a free cash flow metric that I have to meet, and there's a revenue generation and orders metric that I have to meet.

It's those business metrics that determine the success of a program. If I can't tie a program back to one of those three things, we, frankly, shouldn't be working on it.

What steps are you taking to hit that $700 million productivity target?

Fowler: I'll give you an example: Our services business is probably one of the biggest elements of productivity for us. If you picture GE, we sell big equipment -- aircraft engines, locomotives, turbines, MRI units. We have a large field staff -- 40,000 field workers that are out doing field maintenance and support for our customers. We've implemented a set of technologies over this last year that starts to automate and simplify their world.

In our power business, field service engineers use 86 different applications to do their job. Think about the process complexity behind all that. We've used our Predix platform to build one application that's persona-based that's focused on how they do their job; that gives them every transaction, every piece of data, every drawing that they need to do their job. We've started to overlay augmented reality on top of visualizations to show them how to do their job. And we've used collaboration tools to let them collaborate and see how the assets that they're working on are running in real time. That alone [resulted in] $200 million of productivity last year.

We look at each job as a persona, and we look at how can to make that persona -- that person's job -- easier to do.

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GE's Jim Fowler embraces the 'chief automation officer' role - TechTarget

Letters: Arrest those profiting from the opioid crisis – Palm Beach Post

Regarding the opioid crisis, it seems to me that one main factor is the price gouging by the pharmaceutical firms. According to the article in The Post, Governments cost in opioid crisis raises unthinkable: Let victims die? (Friday), some of the antidotes have increased 800 percent and others doubled or tripled.

Sounds like someone is making a large profit off of this human disaster. These profiteers should be arrested along with the sober home owners.

RICHARD NICHOLS, BOYNTON BEACH

I was astounded and disgusted by a recent letter that The Post published opining that erasing Confederacy is a form of prejudice. Actually, erasing the true history of slavery in the South is a form of ignorance. Imagine Germany defending the Nazi atrocities as a way of life.

We must not pretend that the Civil War was fought over states rights. It was fought because the moral compass of the country righted itself and we realized that we could not continue to allow the horror of slavery to continue to stain our country.

The fact that the writer of the letter does not see this is a reminder of how far we still must travel.

SYLVIA WINDMUELLER, WEST PALM BEACH

Lately, The Post has been running all these teary-eyed stories of undocumented immigrants facing deportation and The Post seems to support a very liberal view of enforcement of existing immigration laws. So I ask, why even have immigration laws if you wish to ignore and not enforce them?

Maybe this same procedure could apply to other laws, such as paying federal, state and local taxes. Lets also allow our borders to go unmonitored and just open our nation to all refugees who wish to come here to live.

Guess all this makes me a hard-liner on the issue of immigration, or maybe Im just a little old-fashioned and believe that if you have laws, they should be enforced and not just ignored because its politically popular in certain regions of the nation.

RICHARD BRIANT, ROYAL PALM BEACH

As a senior citizen of Florida, I am appalled at President Donald Trump getting temporary visas for foreign workers to work for him personally, at his golf courses or business interests. (Trump hopes to hire 76 foreign workers at Mar-a-Lago, Trump National, Friday)

If the president is not going to give these jobs to Americans like he promised, then at the very least he should pay these foreign individuals well above minimum wage, like they deserve.

What about the immigrants who are fully employed and have married Americans, and are raising American children in our country? The president is looking to deport these people who are contributing important work to our society. If his whole purpose in deporting these people is to favor American jobs, then why is he giving away 15,000 visas? Seventy-six of these visas were specifically for employees at his favorite local golf course.

He boasts that hell pay these individuals low wages even below minimum wage. Does he not realize that these are people who need to make a living?

What happened to his Buy American, Hire American? It looks terrible that our people have to go out and apply for unemployment and he is employing foreigners for his own golf courses. So the president is acting in his personal interests, at the expense of what he claims is best for this country.

GLORINE SCHWEITZER, BOYNTON BEACH

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Letters: Arrest those profiting from the opioid crisis - Palm Beach Post

Message from the youth: Abolish slavery – San Francisco Bay View

by Kojuan Miles

I am a reformed gang member from South Central Lanes. I am now practicing Islam, which translates to mean submission, obedience and peace. Being incarcerated right now, I am in a state of submission and in order to retain peace I must be obedient.

Kojuan Miles at age 20 seven years ago was playing football in Tacoma, Washington.

I grew up in Los Angeles, where there is a certain intensity applied to gangbanging that stems from tribal warfare, and through this unruly violence there is still solidarity that unites the worst of adversaries in the closest of compounds to fight for equality for our known or unknown brothers. As was once said to me by a fellow Muslim brother when I embraced Islam, If you can take that same intensity that was applied to gangbanging and apply it to Islam, you will become a great Muslim.

Well, its the same for this fight we have on our hands induced by this modern day slavery in Texas. NOW, people, is the time to break these chains.

As spoken by my brother Keith Malik Washington in the March 2016 Bay View: We cannot do what others have done because we have not reached the level of solidarity and political development prisoners in other states such as California have reached. But like Sam Cooke once sang, A Change Gon Come, and the time for change is now.

To create this mentality of solidarity, we have to all come together and become one like the bricks in the wall. And in order to come together, we as a people who are aware must spread the word to the unaware and awaken society on whats taking place in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.

Let not the fight begin only in Texas, but let it extend as far as this message of truth can reach. Because loved ones afar are still affected as well. Take me, for example. I am currently incarcerated in the state of Texas, but I have no family in Texas; everyone is back in California. Being trapped here causes stress on my family because Texas keeps denying my parole for reasons unrelated to what I was charged for.

At the same time, they keep telling me Im getting paid for work time and good time, but yet I keep getting set-off after set-off. It seems almost impossible to get out of Texas and back home to my mother, who is very ill from diabetes. Im pretty sure that Im not the only one who has come from another state and been bound by this modern day slavery.

So let this be the beginning of a battle that extends as far and wide as possible so this fight wont be just for us in Texas but in other states if any are affected by these same circumstances. So lets spread the word and awaken awareness because a closed mouth doesnt get heard.

Amerika must know that slavery has not yet been abolished. One can still maintain peace, submit and be obedient as a Muslim, but if given a righteous cause, one can still fight. So we the people must recognize this cause and fight for whats right.

To my Texas brothers, to my Texas sisters, to my Caucasian brothers, to my Latino brothers, to my brothers of affiliation, we as a whole are being affected by this centuries old plague of bondage. So lets not look at it as something only the Muslim or the Blackman is going through but something we as a people are going through one love!

These are the photos Kojuan is referring to, this one taken in 1975 at the Cummins Prison Farm in Texas. Photo courtesy The Marshall Project

Tell a family member; tell a friend. Lets start aiming at the media to shed light into the darkness. Lets start blogging about it. Lets create discussions about this in political environments through the internet. Lets email people of great importance who will hear this condition that we prisoners in Texas prisons live in and will make a change to end slavery in Texas once and for all.

In the Bay View March 2016 issue, there were pictures from 1975 and 1978 of inmates in Texas being shouted orders to work by a gunman on a horse work that no one can actually prove we are being compensated for. How different is that from when my ancestors used to pick cotton over 200 years ago? Not much. Aint no difference between those 1970s pictures and what goes on today.

Generally speaking, we just dont have pictures of today. Same cowboy boots, same spurs, same Confederate gray uniforms, same cowboy hats, same pistol and shotgun, same Bossman shouting orders on a horse to this day.

Were not asking for a lot just to be recognized for our hard work through compensation. Every man should be paid for his hard work and effort and not be told he is getting paid so TDCJ (Texas Department of Criminal Justice) can just sound and look good to the public.

Both parties us prisoners in Texas and TDCJ know that no one is getting paid and no one is doing any paying. If a legitimate and professional analyst were to look into this so called system of payment for our work time and good time, he or she would find this system to be fraudulent. This is what is keeping us from going home to our loved ones.

This photo was taken in 1978 at the Ellis Unit in Texas. Photo courtesy The Marshall Project

Its a franchise for modern day slavery. If they can keep us bound in chains, then they can continue to make money off of us; if they let us go, then they lose profits and proceeds. This is systemic bondage built on slavery and Confederate principles.

Through these words, I hope that same intensity that came from my days of rampant gangbanging can radiate an energy in you that signifies a calling for solidarity. Thats a word often used by my brother Keith Malik Washington in his article on the abolition of prison slavery in Texas in the March 2016 issue.

Taking a stand starts with us and we can build a mass movement if we can stand together. So, people, hear me out because this is far, far more than just an outcry. Let this instead be the beginning of a struggle that does not begin with me but it begins with us. Power to the people.

Send our brother some love and light: Kojuan Miles, 1912338, Coffield Unit, 2661 FM 2054, Tennessee Colony TX 75884.

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Message from the youth: Abolish slavery - San Francisco Bay View