Thin, flexible, light-absorbent material – Printed Electronics World

Transparent window coatings that keep buildings and cars cool on sunny days. Devices that could more than triple solar cell efficiencies. Thin, lightweight shields that block thermal detection. These are potential applications for a thin, flexible, light-absorbing material developed by engineers at the University of California San Diego.

The material, called a near-perfect broadband absorber, absorbs more than 87 percent of near-infrared light (1,200 to 2,200 nanometer wavelengths), with 98 percent absorption at 1,550 nanometers, the wavelength for fiber optic communication. The material is capable of absorbing light from every angle. It also can theoretically be customized to absorb certain wavelengths of light while letting others pass through.

Materials that "perfectly" absorb light already exist, but they are bulky and can break when bent. They also cannot be controlled to absorb only a selected range of wavelengths, which is a disadvantage for certain applications. Imagine if a window coating used for cooling not only blocked infrared radiation, but also normal light and radio waves that transmit television and radio programs.

By developing a novel nanoparticle-based design, a team led by professors Zhaowei Liu and Donald Sirbuly at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering has created a broadband absorber that's thin, flexible and tunable.

"This material offers broadband, yet selective absorption that could be tuned to distinct parts of the electromagnetic spectrum," Liu said.

The absorber relies on optical phenomena known as surface plasmon resonances, which are collective movements of free electrons that occur on the surface of metal nanoparticles upon interaction with certain wavelengths of light. Metal nanoparticles can carry a lot of free electrons, so they exhibit strong surface plasmon resonance but mainly in visible light, not in the infrared.

UC San Diego engineers reasoned that if they could change the number of free electron carriers, they could tune the material's surface plasmon resonance to different wavelengths of light. "Make this number lower, and we can push the plasmon resonance to the infrared. Make the number higher, with more electrons, and we can push the plasmon resonance to the ultraviolet region," Sirbuly said. The problem with this approach is that it is difficult to do in metals.

To address this challenge, engineers designed and built an absorber from materials that could be modified, or doped, to carry a different amount of free electrons: semiconductors. Researchers used a semiconductor called zinc oxide, which has a moderate number of free electrons, and combined it with its metallic version, aluminum-doped zinc oxide, which houses a high number of free electrons not as much as an actual metal, but enough to give it plasmonic properties in the infrared.

The materials were combined and structured in a precise fashion using advanced nanofabrication technologies in the Nano3 cleanroom facility at the Qualcomm Institute at UC San Diego. The materials were deposited one atomic layer at a time on a silicon substrate to create an array of standing nanotubes, each made of alternating concentric rings of zinc oxide and aluminum-doped zinc oxide. The tubes are 1,730 nanometers tall, 650 to 770 nanometers in diameter, and spaced less than a hundred nanometers apart. The nanotube array was then transferred from the silicon substrate to a thin, elastic polymer. The result is a material that is thin, flexible and transparent in the visible.

"There are different parameters that we can alter in this design to tailor the material's absorption band: the gap size between tubes, the ratio of the materials, the types of materials, and the electron carrier concentration. Our simulations show that this is possible," said Conor Riley, a recent nanoengineering Ph.D. graduate from UC San Diego and the first author of this work. Riley is currently a postdoctoral researcher in Sirbuly's group.

Those are just a few exciting features of this particle-based design, researchers said. It's also potentially transferrable to any type of substrate and can be scaled up to make large surface area devices, like broadband absorbers for large windows.

"Nanomaterials normally aren't fabricated at scales larger than a couple centimeters, so this would be a big step in that direction," Sirbuly said.

The technology is still at the developmental stage. Liu and Sirbuly's teams are continuing to work together to explore different materials, geometries and designs to develop absorbers that work at different wavelengths of light for various applications.

Source and top image: UC San Diego

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Scanning Probe Microscopes (SPM) Market: Microscope Offers Accurate Sampling and Flexibility for Customer Specific … – Digital Journal

Transparency Market Research Report Added "Scanning Probe Microscopes (SPM) Market - Global Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends and Forecast 2016 - 2024"

This press release was orginally distributed by SBWire

Albany, NY -- (SBWIRE) -- 02/06/2017 -- Scanning probe microscopes include imaging technologies that measure surface of small molecules, atoms and fine scales. This technique uses interaction of sharp, electrically charged probe with the surface of samples at particular points. This electrically charged probe is used to interact with sample that helps researchers to understand the properties of sample specimen. In addition, scanning probe microscope scan sample surface with sharp probe in order to observe three dimensional images at high magnification rate. Scanning probe technology is widely used for the study of macro-molecules and biological specimens.

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Additionally, scanning probe microscopy technique is used for the measurement of wide variety of inorganic (e.g. to measure surface chemistry of the molecules), synthetic (e.g. identify surface of polymers) and biological materials (like polymers and polymer matrix). In addition, scanning probe microscope technology can also be used for manipulation and observation of environmental non-conductive specimen.

The market of scanning probe microscopes is witnessing positive growth owing to development of advanced technologies in this field coupled with wide application areas of scanning probe microscopy in science, environmental and engineering field. For example, RHK Technology, Inc. offers innovative and well engineered RHK UHV Scanning Probe Microscopes. This microscope provides variety of applications in science and environmental field. In addition, Danish Micro Engineering A/S offers ProberStation 150 scanning probe microscope.

This microscope offers accurate sampling and flexibility for customer specific modifications by combining with other types of analytical heads. Thus, these types of offering will help key manufacturers to attract more number of customers hence drives the market growth. In addition, various advantages of scanning probe microscope as compared to conventional optical microscopes will further drive the market growth. For example, scanning probe micros offers highest possible magnification i.e. more than 800 to 1000 times greater than conventional microscopes.

Thus, this advantage will offer proper analysis of sample specimen hence drives the market growth of scanning probe microscopes. Moreover, these types of advanced microscopy is rapidly growing in developing countries like North America and Europe due to their innovative features and novel applications in variety of disciplines that will further boost the overall market of scanning probe microscope. However, high cost of these types of microscopes will restrain the market growth.

Geographically, North America is the largest market of scanning probe microscopes due to the launch of novel and innovative products by domiciled key manufacturer coupled with increasing uptake of these technologies by consumers. Europe is considered as the second largest market of scanning probe microscopes. The growth of this market is attributed to the presence of large number of companies like NanoTechnology GmbH, Danish Micro Engineering A/S and others.

This factor would help European market to grow consistently in future and hence stimulate the market growth. Additionally, Asia-Pacific region in emerging markets for scanning probe microscopes because of increasing awareness about scanning probe microscopy technology among customers.

Various key players contributing to the global scanning probe microscopes market comprises Danish Micro Engineering A/S (DME), Klocke Nanotechnik, Agilent Technologies, Omicron NanoTechnology GmbH, Hitachi High-Tech Science Corporation, RHK Technology, Inc., Bruker Nano, Danish Micro Engineering, Schaefer Technology and others.

About Transparency Market Research Transparency Market Research (TMR) is a global market intelligence company providing business information reports and services. The company's exclusive blend of quantitative forecasting and trend analysis provides forward-looking insight for thousands of decision makers. TMR's experienced team of analysts, researchers, and consultants use proprietary data sources and various tools and techniques to gather and analyze information.

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Scanning Probe Microscopes (SPM) Market: Microscope Offers Accurate Sampling and Flexibility for Customer Specific ... - Digital Journal

Moore’s Law is running out but don’t panic – ComputerWeekly.com

Intel kicked off CES 2017 in Las Vegas with the declaration that Moores Law is still relevant as it slated its first 10nm (nanometre) processor chips for release later this year.

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Despite this, engineers are facing real issues in how to continue to push system performance to cope with the growing demands of new and emerging datacentre workloads.

This isnt the first time the end of Moores Law has been proclaimed, but Intel and other chip makers have so far found new tricks for shrinking transistors to meet the goal of doubling density every two years, with a knock-on boost for compute performance.

Intel chief executive Brian Krzanich said at CES: Ive been in this industry for 34 years and Ive heard the death of Moores Law more times than anything else in my career. And Im here today to really show you and tell you that Moores Law is alive and well and flourishing. I believe Moores Law will be alive well beyond my career, alive and well and kicking.

Yet the pace is slowing as Intel works at developing 7nm and 5nm technologies to follow on from 10nm. The introduction of 10nm itself has already been delayed by a year because of difficulties with the manufacturing process, and these difficulties are likely to increase as the size approaches physical limits on how small the on-chip circuitry can be made.

I cant see them getting much beyond 5nm, and Moores Law will then run out because we will have reached the end of the silicon era, says Ovum principal analyst Roy Illsley. Some industry observers think this will happen in the next 10 years or so.

As to what will ultimately replace silicon, such as optical processing or quantum computing, there appears no consensus so far. However, this does not mean that compute power will cease to expand, as both hardware and software in the datacentre have evolved since the days of single-chip servers and monolithic applications.

The way apps are written has changed, says Illsley. They are now distributed and scalable, so Moores Law is a rather pointless metric for what a computer can do, anyway.

In fact, the industry hit a similar crisis some time ago, when Intel discovered that its single-core chips simply overheated when ever-increasing clock speeds started to approach 4GHz. The solution then was to change tack and deliver greater processing power by using the extra transistors to put multiple processor cores onto the same chip, and comparable architectural shifts will enable the industry to continue to boost processing power.

Such an approach can be seen in the growing interest in complementing conventional central processing units (CPUs) with specialised accelerators that may be better suited to handling specific tasks or workloads. A good example of this is the graphics processing unit (GPU), which has long been used to accelerate 3D graphics, but which has also found its way into high-performance compute (HPC) clusters thanks to the massively parallel architecture of a GPU which makes it excellent for performing complex calculations on large datasets.

In 2016, Nvidia launched its DGX-1 server, which sports eight of its latest Tesla GPUs with 16GB memory apiece and is aimed at applications involving deep learning and artificial intelligence (AI) accelerated analytics. Nvidias system can do what would have taken a whole datacentre of servers a few years ago, at a pretty competitive price, says Illsley.

Another example is the field programmable gate array (FPGA), which is essentially a chip full of logic blocks that can be configured to perform specific functions. It provides a hardware circuit that can perform those functions much faster than can be done in software, but which can be reconfigured under software control, if necessary.

One notable adopter of FPGAs is Microsoft, which uses the technology in its Azure datacentre servers to speed up Bing searches and accelerate software-defined networking (SDN).

Intel is also working on integrating FPGA circuitry into some of its Xeon server chips, which could lead to broader adoption. In 2016, the firm showed off a Xeon coupled with a discrete FPGA inside a chip package, but its goal is to get both onto a single piece of silicon.

Meanwhile, Intel prefers to push its Xeon Phi platform rather than GPU acceleration for demanding workloads. These many integrated core chips combine a large number of CPU cores (up to 72 in the latest Knights Landing silicon) which are essentially x86 cores with 512-bit vector processing extensions, so they can run much of the same code as a standard Intel processor.

However, one issue with having so many cores on one chip is getting access to data in system memory for all those cores. Intel has addressed this by integrating 16GB of high-speed memory inside each Xeon Phi chip package, close to the CPU cores.

HPE has shown a different approach with The Machine, its experimental prototype for a next-generation architecture. This has been described as memory-driven computing, and is based around the notion of a massive, global memory pool that is shared between all the processors in a system, enabling large datasets to be processed in memory.

A working version, demonstrated at HPE Discover in December 2016, saw each processor directly controlling eight dual inline memory modules (DIMMs) as a local memory pool, with a much larger global pool of memory comprising clusters of eight DIMMs connected via a memory fabric interface that also links to the processors. In the demo, all the memory was standard DRAM, but HPE intended The Machine to have a non-volatile global memory pool.

In fact, focusing on processors overlooks the fact that memory and storage are a bigger brake on performance, as even flash-based storage takes several microseconds to read a block of data, during which time the processor may execute millions of instructions. So anything that can speed memory and storage access will deliver a welcome boost to system performance, and a number of technologies are being developed, such as Intel and Microns 3D XPoint or IBMs Phase-Change Memory, which promise to be faster than flash memory, although their cost is likely to see them used at first as a cache for a larger pool of slower storage.

These are being developed alongside new I/O interfaces that aim to make it quicker and easier to move data between memory and the processor or accelerator. Examples include Nvidias NVLink 2.0 for accelerators and the Gen-Z standard that aims to deliver a high-speed fabric for connecting both memory and new storage-class memory technologies.

One thing Illsley thinks we may see in the future is systems that are optimised for specific workloads. Currently, virtually all computers are general-purpose designs that perform different tasks by running the appropriate software. But some tasks may call for a more specialised application-specific architecture to deliver the required performance, especially if AI approaches such as deep learning become more prevalent.

Moores Law, which started out as an observation and prediction on the exponential growth of transistors in integrated circuits by Intel founder Gordon Moore, has lasted five decades. We may be reaching the point where it no longer holds true for silicon chips, but whatever happens, engineers will ensure that compute power continues to expand to meet the demands thrown at it.

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Call for Papers: Workshop on HPC in a post Moore’s Law World – insideHPC

The Workshop on HPC computing in a post Moores Law World has issued their Call for Papers. Held in conjunction with ISC 2017, the all-day workshop takes place June 22 in Frankfurt, Germany.

The impending end of traditional MOSFET scaling has sparked research into preserving HPC performance improvements through alternative computational models. To better shape our strategy, we need to understand where each technology is headed and where it will be in a span of 20 years. This workshop brings together experts who develop or use promising technologies to present the state of their work, and spark a discussion on the promise and detriments of each approach. This includes technologies that adhere to the traditional digital computational model, as well as new models such as neuromorphic and quantum computing models. As part of the workshop, we are accepting paper submissions. Papers will be published in the Springers Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series. You can find the call for papers with detailed instructions and a link to the submission site here. We will also hold short panels and keynote presentations from experts in the field.

In scope for this workshop are all topics relevant to improving performance for HPC applications after MOSFET scaling (currently driven by Moores law) stops:

Submissions are due March 6, 2017.

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Psychonauts in the Rhombus of Ruin Feels Like an Evolution of Double Fine’s Adventure Game Roots – UploadVR

The original Psychonauts is the definition of a cult-classic. Tim Schafer spent over a decade at LucasArts making comedicadventure games like Grim Fandango, Day of the Tentacle, and The Secret of Monkey Island. Eventually, he left LucasArts to found his own game studio, Double Fine Productions, and their first game was a third-person platforming adventure about a secret society ofpsychic spies. Fans loved it, critics adored it, and as is the case sometimes, it just didnt sell well.

Fast forward severalyears after a handful of re-releases of the original and Psychonauts 2 is officially happeningfollowing the studios raise of over $3.8 million thanks to the democratic power of crowdfunding.Psychonauts in the Rhombus of Ruin then, alternatively, is a VR-exclusive first-person adventure puzzle game in which you embark on a rescue mission for the leader of the Psychonauts himself. The entire 3-4 hour adventure begins right where the original game leaves off and leads directly into the numbered sequel set to release next year in 2018.

Last week I visited Double Fines San Francisco office and had the chance to play through the first 45 minutes of the game and chat with Project Lead,Chad Dawson. He explained that when Schafer had first theorized the idea for Psychonauts 2, this interim story we find here wasnt factored in at all. The plan before was to simply reference the mission you embark on with your team in the sequel, but just leave it as a quickly referenced unplayable flashback. The prospect ofSonys PlayStation VR (PSVR) quickly changed that.

After playing the game for an extended amount of time, I can see why. When I originally got my hands on an abbreviated demo at E3 and was pleased with the quality of the presentation and the appearance of Double Fines trademark humor, but was unsure how well it could translate to an entire adventure. Thankfully the mechanics seem more than capable.

Dawson explained that what I was playing was essentially a final build of the game thats already passed certification by Sony. After donning a PSVR headset, I selected the New Game option from the main menu and got loaded into the mind of Raz, the main character of the series and primary protagonist in each of the franchises games. As a psychic spy, he has a litany of special mind powers.

For starters, his clairvoyance allows him to jump into the minds of other people, seeing things through their eyes and reading their thoughts. Telekinesis lets him lift and move objects, he can push things too, and even set items on fire as well. The games opening moments serve as a tutorial of sorts, as it slowly introduces new powers and mechanics.

Eventually Im able to connect to the mind of the captured Psychonauts leader,Truman Zanotto, while he is being held captive in a secret enemy base. This is where the real game starts. In a traditional point and click adventure game, youd explore the environment and search for clues about what to do next, but in this new Psychonauts game, it feels like a more organic puzzle solving adventure. I can look around my surroundings using my actual head and leap into the minds of guards standing around.

After taking over the minds of others, I can see the room from new perspectives, looking for clues and items to help me figure out where the leaders being kept. All in all, thats what the game boils down to. Youll be placed in a tricky situation, tasked with finding out what to do next using your surroundings for clues, and listening to exposition and details explained through dialogue. And even though in real life I was sitting in a meeting room surrounded by other people while I played, I couldnt help but chuckle to myself at the jokes and witty humor throughout.

Dawson also explained the myriad challenges that a game like Psychonauts in the Rhombus of Ruin presented. Since the team had never worked on a piece of VR content before, they started to realize that traditional movement caused some sickness in people, which is part of why the clairvoyance mechanic is used to teleport around levels by traveling through the minds of others. Since PSVR performs best as a 180-degree device, every time a player teleports there needs to be at least one other person in the line of sight directly in front of you so that you can move again.

This changed the way environments were designed and forced the studio to think about levels differently. An old-school adventure game or a modern interpretation of the genre like Double Fines Broken Age might simply display 2D illustrated scenes that you can move around and click on, but that doesnt work in VR.

Some games like Obduction [Review: 8/10] adapt immersive, puzzle-based adventure games into VR with little changes, but Psychonauts in the Rhombus of Ruin feels like a more robust re-imagining of the genre. Its designed from the ground up with VR in mind and the mere presence of psychic puzzles truly make you feel like the headset is a portal into the minds of the games characters. Its about as clever and clean of a genre/platform combination you could hope for and feels right at home.

You wont have much longer to wait until you can get your hands on it either, asPsychonauts in the Rhombus of Ruin is set to release for PSVR this February 21st. Currently there are no plans for a Rift or Vive version, although perhaps that will come at a later time.

Are you a Psychonauts fan? Do you plan on getting this when it releases in a couple of weeks? Let us know in the comments down below!

Tagged with: double fine, playstation, ps4, PSVR, Psychonauts in the Rhombus of Ruin

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Portal On HoloLens Might Be The Coolest Use Of Mixed Reality Yet – UploadVR

If our wishes come true, Valve will one day bring Portal to VR headsets. But what might the beloved puzzle series look like if it was brought into the real world with mixed reality?

Thats a question developer Kenny W set out to answer with this incredible fan-made project that combines the crazy world of Aperture Science with our own. As a simple side project, the developer has brought a fully functioning Portal gun onto Microsofts HoloLens, and its able to shoot its iconic orange and blue reality-defying doors onto different surfaces in the real world.

While you obviously cant step through them to teleport yourself (its running on HoloLens, not magic), the app does feature the lovable companion cube, which can be placed in one portal and then fall out of the other.

As you can see in the trailer above, this brings a lot of the mind-bending rules of Valves videogame into the real world. At one point the user has the cube continuously falling through two portals before switching one of them to fire it across the room. HoloLens is able to recognize objects within your space, thus the cube bounces off of walls and lands on surfaces like tables. It even realistically rolls down a set of stairs.

Its not a full game as such, and the portals dont visually reflect the place they lead to like in the real game, though thats impossible with the current HoloLens hardware. At one point the player does topple a gun turret that could have otherwise shot at him, proving that theres definitely challenge to be had here, but youre not likely to see this evolve into a full MR game without Valves official approval, especially while HoloLens itself remains a developer kit and not a full consumer product.

Still, Valve has approved of fan-made VR minigames set in its universe, so theres always hope.

We do know that Valve is making its own VR videogames and, if were lucky, it just might be a new entry in the Portal series. If its anything as cool as this, it could be one of the best VR apps yet.

Tagged with: HoloLens, mixed reality, portal

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Portal On HoloLens Might Be The Coolest Use Of Mixed Reality Yet - UploadVR

Field in View: With $500 Million Worth Of Hindsight, Does Mark Zuckerberg Regret Buying Oculus? – UploadVR

I have to admit that the complexities of the Oculus/ZeniMax legal battle had me wanting to stray away from the topic for this weeks column, but as I was pondering over the news of the last week I kept coming back to it. We had headline after headline of juicy details along with what I think was a historic verdict that placed a hefty $500 million decisionon the VR specialist.

Ultimately, there was no getting away from it.

The thread I keep coming back to, however, goes beyond just this trial. Though hell wince handing it over (if that is indeed the end result after promised appeals), half a billion is probably water off a ducks back for Mark Zuckerberg. It is actually the exact amount that Facebook is investing into VR content, and theyre not likely to see returns on that for a long time yet. And lets not forget that Facebooks own origins are so closely intertwined with legal drama that Hollywood managed to make a movie out of it.

Courtroom battles are to be expected when companies making billions are brought into the field, and I dont think this verdict alone will have Menlo Park regretting bringing Oculus into the fold.

But I do wonder if viewing the result as the latest in a string of high-profile embarrassments for Oculus keeps Zuckerberg up at night.

To say the Rift has had growing pains is a bit of an understatement. It is a wonderful headset, arguably with the best content library of any VR device right now and bolstered with some truly excellent position-tracked controls in Touch. The product Facebook offers is state of the art and a sublime taste of the future. But the company that built it just cant seem to catch a break of late.

Some of those issues have been unfortunate, perhaps unavoidable mishaps. Rifts belated launch was a rough time for VR enthusiasts, as shipping confusion stretched out for months, and during that time Oculus enforced and then removed security measures that didnt win it many fans in the VR industry. These incidents were made all the more public by outcries from figureheads like Epics Tim Sweeney. Still, as a subsidiary shipping its first product you could forgive these issues.

The infamous ballpark situation, which saw the company suggesting a price drastically lower than the $599 it came to be in the months before launch, has mostly been forgotten. What hasnt been forgotten, I dont think, is last September.

It was a pretty uneventful news days when, out of the blue, a report surfaced online that Rift creator Palmer Luckey had funded a political propaganda campaign in the midst of a very divisive election. I dont need to tell you what the implications of such information surfacing online could be and, if you were reading the Internet that week, youll have seen it for yourself. After a brief apology on social media, VRs former poster child vanished. He hasnt tweeted or been seen on Facebook since, and only recently popped up to testify in court.

This is too good an image.

Think about that for a second. The last time we heard from Palmer Luckey, he apologized for embarrassing the company he helped start and, in doing so, gave himself a stigma that will be brought up in likely every internet comments section on stories about him for years to come. Four months on, a jury decided he had broken a non-disclosure agreement, and cost Facebook yet more public humiliation.

Its an extraordinary turn of events, the likes of which few could have foreseen. And it leaves me asking, with all the hindsight he has now, would Mark Zukcerberg have done anything different?

Publicly, I think hes going to tell you that he wouldnt. But inside the mind of the CEO, perhaps he would.Either way, we know Zuckerberg isnt going to do anything other than lie in the bed hes made. Now led by Facebooks new Head of VR, Oculus is more closely integrated with the social networking company than ever. Oculus has had a year of taking steps forward and backward seemingly in equal measure. Maybe now it can finally put troubles behind it.

Tagged with: Field in View

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Skinit Custom Cases Personalize and Protect Your Devices – AppAdvice

I chose the Cargo Case for my iPhone 7. I tend to drop my phone from time to time, so I didnt want to take a chance with just a skin or one of the thinner cases. Rather than choosing one of their abundantdesigns, I went with the custom option. Designing my case was easy and fun. I chose a photo from Pinterest that goes well with my wardrobe and uploaded it to the site.

Ive been using the case for several weeks, and its a fantastic case. Not only does it look sharp and my match my outfits, but it offers excellent protection. Its constructed of plastic and a hard rubber around the edges which gives it some flexibility. This makes it easy to take on and off.

The Skinit Cargo Case has custom cutouts for the lightning port, speakers, camera, and Ring/Silent switch. It has button covers for the volume buttons and Sleep/Wake button. There is a lip around the edge that comes up over the screen edges so your screen wont get damaged ifyou put your phone face down. The edges of the case have some texturizing for extra grip. Yet for all that protection, the case is not overly bulky. The decal is true to color and affixed strongly onto the case.

If I have any complaints about it, its only that the design doesnt cover the entire case. Some of the other designs do have edge-to-edge designs, but the Cargo Case has a substantial amount of either black or white and gray. This gives Skinit a lot of room for branding; the name is imprinted both on the edge of the case and on the back next to the camera. I dont mind branding on the side, but its not my preference to have it on the back as well. But these are small quibbles.

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Roomscale VR is Great, But the Gamepad isn’t Going Anywhere – UploadVR

For many people, the end-all be-all of virtual reality is being able to get up and move around inside of a digital space with roomscale. With the HTC Vive, you set up lighthouse base stations in opposite corners of your play space and the system tracks your movement in 3D space around your entire room. With the Oculus Rift, you can accomplish something very similar with extra sensors and the Oculus Touch motion controllers.

Theres nothing quite like taking a step forward with your own feet and feeling yourself moving in a digital environment. For some genres of games, like first-person shooters, its nothing short of revolutionary. Even thoughroomscale is amazing, it doesnt mean that something else isnt just as impressive and exciting in its own way. Just because we have full movement in roomscale VR now, it doesnt mean that gamepad-based VR experiences are dead.

While the VR industry is still in its infantile stages, developers are constantly experimenting and seeking new ways of delivering exciting moments to players. The best horror game I played last year was a roomscale-only title called A Chair in a Room: Greenwater [Review: 8/10], the riveting Onward is an incredible shooter that immerses you in its action, and exploratory puzzle games and adventure titles like The Gallery [Review: 9/10] breathe new life into formerly dormant genres. I recognize the potential of roomscale, but it doesnt have to come at the expense of the gamepad.

The first VR game I ever played almost two years before it released was EVE: Valkyrie [Review: 9/10] and it blew my mind. Cockpit experiences and racing games feel great using gamepads and are arguably even more immersive than their standing, moving, roomscale counterparts. This is especially true while were still struggling with VRs distracting wire problem and room size requirements.

But when it comes to gamepad games, the best practices of how to create a control scheme, what works for different genres, how to design a game world, what makes something fun, and all of the other guiding principles have been researched, developed, and iterated on for decades. Bringing those existing ideas into the immersive world of head-tracked VR is complicated enough without asking people to move around as well.

With so much potential and history in the game industry thats rooted in the player holding a gamepad while seated, it feels like a disservice to that legacy to simply ignore it altogether. Some roomscale experiences have the potential to wrap us up in the power of their stories and innovation of their technology, but other times I just want to sit down with a controller in my hand and play a good game.

When I play a game like Luckys Tale [Review: 9/10] in VR, Im reminded of Super Mario 64, but I feel closer to the action than ever before. Edge of Nowhere [Review: 9/10] reminds me of Uncharted, Tomb Raider, and The Last of Us, but the sounds of the world surround me. Resident Evil 7 [Review: 9/10] feels like the most immersive and terrifying game ever when youre trapped alone inside the PSVR headset.

Damaged Core [Review: 9.5/10] is inventive and unique in a way that couldnt work outside of a headset. These and other games weve seen over the past couple of years are proof that you dont necessarily need to get up and move around in roomscale to enjoy a VR experience.

Landfall, which just had its free weekend beta, is a clever implementation of a top-down tactical game that uses a gamepad as the bread and butter form of controlling your unit. Updating a genre and re-imagining it in a new way doesnt necessitate throwing out the gamepad in favor of motion controllers.

I love being able to look down at my hands and see them accurately represented with hand controllers, but depending on the type of game, that could be a poor form of interaction. If Im playing a fast-paced shooter like Rigs [Review: 8/10], that cockpit isnt conducive to using motion controllers. Third person games feel right at home while holding a gamepad and plenty of obscure or more niche genres work better with dedicated buttons and analog sticks.

At the end of the day, there is enough room in the industry for both gamepad and roomscale VR. There is a certain time, place, and mood that lends itself well to moving around a room in an immersive digital space. Getting physical with sports games, ducking behind cover in shooters, and exploring strange new worlds feels like a natural fit. But if youre putting me in charge of an army, sticking me in a cockpit, or asking me to control a character in third-person, Id feel more at home with a gamepad in my hand.

And finally, being perfectly honest here, sometimes I just want to relax on a couch. Its the same reason that despite my love for VR as a medium and as a way to advance technology, I dont want to give up traditional gaming either. Looking at a TV or monitor a few feet or yards away is satisfying in its own way and I dont think everything needs to be in VR to be good, and just because it is in VR doesnt mean it cant use a gamepad.

The more options we have the better chances there are for innovation and simply good game design. I want to play and enjoy VR games because they are good games first and foremost, not because they are novel experiences.

Tagged with: gamepad, oculus, PSVR, rift, room scale, roomscale, touch, Vive, VR

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5 reasons why your protest song is making things worse – MusicRadar

Unless youve spent the past 12 months so engrossed in Serums wavetable editor that the outside world has become but a distant memory, youll have noticed that were living through interesting times at the moment. Of course, by interesting we mean utterly terrifying.

During such turbulent eras musicians have traditionally turned to making protest music, but from Bob Dylans meaningless Blowin' in the Wind to Mike Reids challenging UKIP Calypso, protest songs are exclusively dreadful pieces of music. Theoretically, their musical shortcomings are mitigated by their ostensibly world-changing powers, but in reality, their effect is limited to say the least.

In fact, creating protest music isnt just a waste of time, its likely to be counter-productive to your cause. If that sounds like an alternative fact, prepare to have your prejudices blown away by MusicRadars top 5 reasons why your protest music is actually making things far worse.

No matter how catchy your melodies or funky your beats, dont fool yourself: your opponents arent going to be swayed by your arguments. Even if your message is objectively accurate, itll likely have the opposite effect to that which you intended according to this research paper, which notes that If people counter-argue unwelcome information vigorously enough, they may end up with 'more attitudinally congruent information in mind than before the debate,' which in turn leads them to report opinions that are more extreme than they otherwise would have had."

Lets take this famous saucily-titled anti-cop jam as an example: despite the evidence submitted to the N.W.A. Court, US law enforcement declined to go F themselves. Who could have imagined such a shocking turn of events?

Unsurprisingly, Facebook has become the primary source of news for younger generations, but once youve dropped your 2-step folktronica truth-bomb on your timeline its only likely to reinforce your similarly-minded friends opinions.

This is because - as everyone apart from the supremely naive realised years ago - social media is an echo chamber that can isolate us from opposing political ideas. Whats more, when people like something theyre given the feeling that theyre helping, reducing the likelihood theyll actually do something useful.

On the plus side, perhaps you might radicalise your mum, or at the very least get a couple of SoundCloud plays off someone you spoke to briefly at a party in 2007.

On the plus side, perhaps you might radicalise your mum, or at the very least get a couple of SoundCloud plays off someone you spoke to briefly at a party in 2007.

So, youre fully committed to dismantling the exploitative capitalist system with your freaky breakcore sounds, but who is really benefiting from your supposedly anarchic antics? Youve bought a computer (which is unlikely to be organic and locally-sourced), forked out to your ISP to upload the data, and everyone who finds your music is almost certainly going to be data-mined to within an inch of their lives by unscrupulous tech giants.

Whats more, your incendiary bangers may be bookended by ads, making a mockery of your anti-establishment stance.

If you're reading this - let alone making socially-aware future bass music on a MacBook in your local independent coffee shop - youre not just a regular Joe. Youre a member of the liberal elite, an ill-defined section of society that everyone hates. It doesnt matter that youre working in the service industry and scraping by on an income that your parents would consider a pittance: your snobby, highfalutin attitudes are driving a wedge between the classes and youre indirectly responsible for the rise of right-wing populism in Europe.

Perhaps instead of banging on about identity politics you should write an aspirational song about poppin bottles in the club like everyone else?

In his documentary HyperNormalisation, film-maker Adam Curtis argues that individualistic self-expression is actually antithetical to effecting political change:

I sometimes wonder whether the very idea of self-expression might be the rigid conformity of our age. It might be preventing us from seeing really radical and different ideas that are sitting out on the margins - different ideas about what real freedom is, that have little to do with our present day fetishization of the self. The problem with todays art is that far from revealing those new ideas to us, it may be actually stopping us from seeing them.

Who could possibly have thought that dedicating the entirety of ones life to programming the most anal neuro bass patches possible alone in a darkened bedroom would result in a navel-gazing attitude?

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Build ’em now! 5 uses for serverless frameworks – InfoWorld

It's easy to be befuddled about "serverless" or "function as a service" architectures. For one, "serverless" is a bit of a misnomer -- thereare servers, but you don't have to maintain them. All you do is upload a snippet of code and let the hosting service handle the rest.

Butwhat sorts of applications are suited to this kind of deployment? The answers tend to be the same whether you're dealing withAWS Lambda or Azure Functions; the designs of those systems all depend on blocks of code triggered by specific actions. Here are five common kinds of apps built out of such pieces.

This is one of the simplest and most direct applications for a serverless architecture: creating REST APIs that return data to be consumed by either another service or by a single-page application.

REST APIs in general are not hard to build. Most of the time, all you need is a basic web framework, a library for rendering data in the format you're returning (typically JSON), and whatever glue code is needed to talk to the back end from which you're pulling data.With a serverless architecture, the developer can focus exclusively on writing and deploying the code needed to serve the API, and not be distracted by much else.

Many common functions that need hand-tuning in a REST API, like autoscaling to meet demand, are addressed automatically by serverless frameworks. Plus, the pay-what-you-use model that's become the staple of cloud pricing means a lightweight, minimally accessed API costs next to nothing to deploy.

This widely adopted mechanism of callbacks over HTTP is a common strategy to implement push, pipes, and plugins -- all of which increase the utility of web applications. Serverless frameworks are particularly well suited for webhooks for the same reason they're useful for creating APIs generally: low overhead, minimal maintenance, automatic scaling. For example, a webhook can be implemented on Azure Functions with Node.js to process SMS messages or phone calls through the Twilio service.

What's more, most webhook-type actions don't need a lot of code to get to work. Thus, they're ideal for thefunction-oriented approach provided by a lambda-style serverless setup and less likely to outgrow such a delivery mechanism.

Serverless architectures also provide a straightforward method to serve up static content: images, audio, or HTML pages that aren't modified by an application.Static assets can be stored on a number of back ends, including an Amazon S3 bucket, and be accelerated through a geolocated cache, such as Cloudflare. (If you're using S3, it's possible to choose Amazon Route 53 to map URLs to specific resources; AWS Lambda itself isn't even needed for these rudimentary cases.)

Again, the big advantage is that each piece of the puzzle automatically scales to fit demand.It's also relatively easy to add dynamic functionality over time if needed. However, with this approach, spin-up time for the function might impact performance, so geocaching becomes more useful.

Think of this as a combination of the above approaches. The basic assets for a page can be served as static content; to render data on the front end,the necessary API calls can be implemented as serverless functions. Rendering of data happens on the front end via a JavaScript framework.

Upside: Each separately served element of the application can scale independently. Downside: The app has to be implemented as a collection of disparate functions rather than a single unified project, though this shouldn't be much of a hurdle for anyone using modern source control and project management techniques. Also, you'll need to implement a front-end framework like React, Angular, or Vue.js -- but again, any self-respecting web developer should already have at least one of them.

Serverless apps run in response to events, but nothing says an event has to be a HTTP request. It could be an event or a message piped in from a cloud service or triggered to run on a schedule -- a convenient method to perform passive or low-priority functions. For example, an image uploaded to an S3 bucket could trigger a function that causes the image to be labeled with appropriate metadata, resized, and cropped based on feedback from an image recognition or analysis API.

The most consistent detail about working with serverless frameworks right now is that they involve creating loosely coupled components -- microservices, for lack of a better word.If the app you have in mind doesn't lend itself to being composed in this manner or if you're trying to port a monolithic app that will be difficult to pull apart and rework, don't shoehorn a serverless setup into that role. Build new, little elements, and grow them from there.

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Build 'em now! 5 uses for serverless frameworks - InfoWorld

Heat, Humidity And Aging Make Medicine Less Potent : Shots – NPR – NPR

Heat and steam from your shower or shave can rob medicine of its potency long before the drug's expiration date. Angela Cappetta/Getty Images hide caption

Heat and steam from your shower or shave can rob medicine of its potency long before the drug's expiration date.

Most of us have reached for a painkiller, at one time or another, only to discover the date on the label shows it has expired. But what does an "expiration" date on medicine really mean? Is it dangerous if you take it anyway? Less effective?

It turns out that date stamped on the label actually means a lot. It's based on scientific evidence gathered by the manufacturer showing how long the drug's potency lasts. Companies expose their medications to different environments, different temperatures and humidity levels to see just how long it takes for the medication to degrade to the point that its effectiveness is compromised.

The general rule, says pharmacist Mike Fossler, with the American College of Clinical Pharmacology, is that once a drug is degraded by 10 percent it has reached "the end of its useful life." If you take it months or even years past the expiration date, it's unlikely to do you any harm, he says; it just might not do you much good.

That may not be a big deal if you're treating a headache, but if you're fighting a bacterial infection with antibiotics like amoxicillin or ciprofloxacin, for example, using less than fully potent drugs could fail to treat the infection and lead to more serious illness.

Pharmacist Mohamed Jalloh, a spokesman for the American Pharmacists Association, says there's an even bigger reason not to rely on old drugs: antibiotic resistance. When you inadvertently "underdose" yourself by taking antibiotics that aren't full strength, he says, you run the risk that the bacteria you're battling will figure out not only how to defeat this weakened drug, but other antibiotics, too.

At least 23,000 people each year in the U.S. die from infections that have become resistant to antibiotics, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

"If your medicine has expired, don't use it," concurs Ilisa Bernstein, deputy director of the office of compliance in the Food and Drug Administration's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.

That goes for over-the-counter drugs, as well as prescription meds. Check the expiration date before even buying those pain relievers or allergy tablets, some pharmacists advise the same way you check your milk. Buy the one with the date that's furthest away.

"Once the expiration date has passed," Bernstein says, "there is no guarantee that the medicine will be safe and effective."

Of course, even new drugs can quickly lose potency if they're not stored properly. Get those pills out of the bathroom "medicine cabinet" now, pharmacists say. The steam from your shower or shave kills pills fast.

"Medicines like the kind of environment that people like a little dry and not too hot or cold," Fossler says. And, of course, don't take medication to the beach or leave it in a hot car. Like humidity, heat degrades a medicine's active ingredients.

Some medications are more vulnerable than others, so check the label. Insulin, certain immunotherapy drugs, and some children's pain relievers and cold remedies require refrigeration and protection from light.

And compared to capsules and tablets, "liquids are not as highly preserved," says Barbara Kochanowski, a scientist with the Consumer Healthcare Products Association. Liquid drugs can more easily become contaminated with bacteria and fungus.

Anytime you see a change in the color, odor or consistency of a drug such as a cream turning into a runny solution consider it a red flag, Kochanowski says, and consult your pharmacist. It's probably time to toss that medication.

Some drugstores, hospitals with pharmacies, drugmakers and drug-treatment centers have been authorized by the federal government, in recent years, to serve as "drug-take-back" sites for some drugs that are expired, or no longer needed. You can check the FDA and Drug Enforcement Agency websites for their latest guidance on the safest ways to dispose of various drugs.

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Heat, Humidity And Aging Make Medicine Less Potent : Shots - NPR - NPR

New study finds children, adolescents at risk from medicine intended for pets – Science Daily


CNN
New study finds children, adolescents at risk from medicine intended for pets
Science Daily
In the study, which was published online by Pediatrics, researchers found that the COPC received an average of 95 calls each year about youth 19 years of age or younger having been exposed to medicines intended for pets. That's about 2 calls every week.
Pet medicines pose poison risk for kidsReuters

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New study finds children, adolescents at risk from medicine intended for pets - Science Daily

‘Black Women in Medicine’ relays struggles, triumphs of doctors – Chicago Tribune

As a black female author and filmmaker who has quadriplegia, Crystal Emery knows a thing or two about succeeding despite adversity.

So when Emery interviewed a group of black female physicians in 2011 as part of a Yale School of Medicine project, she knew she had to tell the world about how they had overcome sexism and racism to do what they loved.

"I was amazed at these wonderful women and their story," said Emery, 55, who lives in New Haven, Conn. "Because it's really the story of the triumph of the human spirit."

Her documentary about these doctors, "Black Women in Medicine," which airs on WTTW World and Create stations 8 p.m. Wednesday and will be shown again on WYCC-Ch. 20 at 8 p.m. Sunday, tells their struggles and triumphs in a series of heartwarming interviews.

The film begins with black women medical students on "Match Day," excitedly finding out where they will be doing their residencies. There are also historical clips on Rebecca Lee Crumpler, who in 1864 became the first black woman to graduate from medical school, plus the civil rights movement and perspectives on the small number of these doctors (roughly 2 percent) and the need for more.

Despite their different backgrounds, these women share determination, passion and the smarts to deal with overt and subtle discrimination, as well as the other stresses that are part of becoming a doctor. They also had supportive parents who stressed education and encouraged them to work hard, be good to others and believe in themselves.

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"I identify with the women in the film because I am a woman, and because I am a black woman, and because I am on the front line fighting for equality for all people," Emery said in an interview. "What I love most about the women in the film is that they have not allowed the -ism vortex to hinder or destroy them, whether it's racism, sexism or, in my case, disability.

"What I also love about them is their strong faith in God," she said.

The cast includes such notables as Dr. Joycelyn Elders, the first black U.S. surgeon general, who is retired but still active in public health; Dr. Jennifer Ellis, one of six black female cardiothoracic surgeons in the U.S.; and Dr. Claudia Thomas, the first black female orthopedic surgeon.

"My focus was to get through medical school, and I was not going to let anything anyone said or did get in my way," Elders says in the film. "I was just so tough, nothing stuck to me and it just rolled off."

But even today, Elders remembers a hurtful episode from decades ago when she was an intern and tried to place an IV line in a 7-year-old white boy. This police chief's son called her the "N" word.

"My impulse was obviously to say something back but I thought, this is a 7-year-old boy and I am his doctor," Elders recalled in an interview. "I had to learn a lot of this. My first responsibility is to do the best job I can as a physician and take the best care of these patients as I possibly can and not let my feelings and reactions get in the way."

Emery, who wrote, directed and produced the film, is also the author of "Against All Odds: Celebrating Black Women in Medicine." In 2016, Emery and Elders teamed up to start a "Changing the Face of Medicine Initiative," which includes showcasing the film and book to try to increase the number of black doctors in the U.S.

Though Emery has a neuromuscular disease and diabetes, her health challenges didn't keep her from being involved in all aspects of the filmmaking, including all interviews with the cast.

"The best filmmakers are those who know how to put together a great team," Emery said. That team included cinematographer Bobby Shepard (director of photography for the movie "Freedom Riders").

"When you have an expert eye like that, you get a depth, you get a color, you get the best of the business. So I can tell a story, but he made telling a story look great," Emery said.

Emery also said she wanted to make the film a healing one, from the spunky music that marks its beginning scenes to the black high schoolers who speak hopefully about their future careers. It ends with an inspiring "Amen," sung by JoAnna Rhinehart.

The doctors in the film often recount their struggles with humor.

"I was at a conference a couple of days ago and it was just assumed that I was not the surgeon," said Ellis, the cardiothoracic surgeon. "They finally said, 'Who's going to be doing the operation?' I said, 'Uh, that would be me honest to goodness.'"

But Thomas, the orthopedic surgeon, said racism continues to be "the biggest stumbling block."

"Those who didn't go through the '60s, civil rights era, don't have perspective on what we had to go through. Some people even believe and buy into that 'post-racial' statement," Thomas said. "There's nothing post-racial in this country. Race matters. It's the first thing they see when people look at you."

The film points out that only about 4 percent of physicians are black (up from 2 percent in 1969), though 13.3 percent of Americans are black. One way to boost those numbers could be mentoring black youths, these doctors note.

The film also emphasizes the importance of black doctors for black patients, explaining that studies have shown patients tend to relate better to doctors who look like them and that can help improve their health outcomes.

Dr. Monica Peek, an associate professor of medicine at the University of Chicago, has experienced her share of racism as a black female doctor, though her parents "gave me the gift of resilience and just sort of believing I was good enough." She called the film "compelling," highlighting the trailblazers who have made the struggle easier and their counterparts today.

"We have come a long way in a very short period of time," Peek said. "I certainly acknowledge that my path has been exponentially easier because of the challenges and sacrifices made by black women physicians before me."

Peek said she thinks her own black female patients are more willing to follow her advice because she, too, is black.

"I think their ability to feel like they have an advocate who is on their side and helping them navigate the health care system has improved their ability to engage in their health management."

That bond has been an inspiration to both Peek and her patients.

"When I walk in the door, people have hugged me and said, 'I'm so proud of you baby,'" Peek said.

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There is still gender bias in medicine | TheHill – The Hill (blog)

On Feb. 3 we celebrated National Women Physicians Day (NWPD) in honor of Dr. Elizabeth Blackwells birthday, the first female physician to graduate medical school in the United States. On this day we remember the enormous contributions made by many women who have paved the way for us while we reflect on these many advances we still see room for improvement.

Gender bias

Implicit gender bias is still present in medicine and there is a continued need to push for gender equality and empowerment of women in their professional and personal lives.

Many women physicians can recount instances in their training and even as attendings when they have been made to feel less than their counterparts. This bias at times is subtle: being called a nurse by patients, not being heard equally at meetings with administrators; and sometimes it is blatant: such as being overlooked for promotions or experiencing gaps in pay.

It can be as simple as being interrupted or not recognized for a thought or an idea. I have felt so many times that I have said something in a meeting but it is not heard until a male colleague repeats it.

Women physicians who start a family are sometimes looked as not being devoted to their profession or not putting in their fair share of time and effort. I have heard many women say how some of their co-residents have made them feel guilty for maternity leave and attendings who are reticent to ask for needed time off. Most women physicians choose to work right up until their time of labor not only to have a longer maternity leave but also to prevent being looked at as being lazy.

The existence of a family itself creates a bias the perception of not wanting to work too hard. When I returned from maternity leave after a C-section I found my schedule switched from outpatient to a busy inpatient service. I questioned this switch with my chief who bluntly informed me, If you are not ready, just extend your leave. I did not.

On medical rounds I felt uncomfortable excusing myself to pump for fear of being considered not a team player. On one of my first job interviews I was told that I probably wanted to work part-time because I had young children. These biases are not always overt, they are understated, and not always present in just men but also found in other women physicians. The image of the ideal physician as an older white male who never leaves the hospital, stays late, works through sickness and puts his work before family has been conditioned into our society. It must change.

Empowering women

These shortages in our profession exist but many academic programs, hospital institutions and private practices have created environments that allow women physicians to flourish in their careers. Such environments have built in support systems and have invested in professional development for leadership positions.

NWPD aims to recognize that these measures are needed early on to make medicine a more welcoming field for all women. This endeavor needs to begin during pre-medical education with female mentors to help young women aspire to become physicians.

I believe medical school resources and schedule flexibility should be made available to assist those with children or in pregnancy. Residency programs should focus on giving women residents equal opportunity to be part of leadership positions and chair committees. Male-oriented programs need to work on cultivating an environment where women feel accepted. Hospitals and private practice should support equal pay for equal work, have defined pathways for promotions or partnerships and have fair representation of women in leadership positions to further model professional growth.

When given the opportunity to frame their own careers, have autonomy over their schedules and feel invested in their futures, women physician are more likely to be productive and successful. I want to encourage equality in opportunities available to both genders, which will lead to better physicians who can serve their communities wholeheartedly.

Samya Mohammad, DO, is an osteopathic rheumatologist in North Carolina and a member of Physician Moms Group.

The views of contributors are their own and are not the views of The Hill.

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Here’s why membership medicine is gaining physician attention – ModernMedicine

Physician practices described as membership medicine have been springing up across the country during the past decade. These practices, in which patients pay a monthly or annual retainer to their doctor or medical office for a contracted bundle of services, offer an alternative model for physicians who hope to spend less time on paperwork and more time with patients.

Jay Keese, executive director of the Direct Primary Care Coalition and a lobbyist with Capital Advocates in Washington, D.C., says those who switch from medicine-as-usual to membership medicine typically reduce their patient panel size from about 2,500 to 600.

Patients in membership medicine practices typically pay about $60 per month for the bundle of services, which are usually standardized within a practice and not individually negotiated, Keese says. With 600 patients, that adds up to a pretty good revenue stream, and you can probably cut down on administrative personnel, resulting in cost savings, he says.

In addition to benefitting from improved income stream, more time with patients and less paperwork, those who have gone the membership medicine route say theyre happy they dont need to participate in the Quality Payment Program established under the Medicare Access and Chip Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA).

Eric Potter, MD, who practices internal medicine and pediatrics in Franklin, Tennessee, under the name Sanctuary Functional Medicine, was pleased when the business consultant who helped him set up his business told him that the new Medicare reimbursement program didnt apply to his new practice.

How much time do we need to spend documenting things rather than just taking care of patients? he says. Given how relatively new and unregulated membership medicine is, he adds, Its a little like cutting down the forest and building a log cabin. You feel like a little bit of a frontiersman.

Kylie Vannaman, MD, a primary care physician and co-founder of Health Suite 110 in Overland Park, Kansas, says shes also glad to be avoiding MACRA. Otherwise, when dealing with Medicare, doctors have to spend time on paperwork and checking boxes to prove what kind of care [theyre] giving, rather than actually giving care, she says. Its exhausting, and not worth it.

Benefits of Membership

Among the benefits of membership medicine is the flexibility it affords in communicating with patients, because physicians no longer need to figure out how theyre going to bill for a visit, Keese says.

Texting over secure text applications is very prevalent. Youre really raising the level of the experience, so the relationship between the doctor and the patient is less defined by a visit, he says. You can have a consult using technologyphone, e-mail, any of these thingsrather than having to come in and see the doctor.

Vic Wood, DO, a primary care doctor in Wheeling, West Virginia, is among the earliest practitioners of membership medicine, having opened a practice in 2003 after reading in Medical Economics about a type of membership practice called concierge medicine (see sidebar for definitions).

He initially aimed his program, which he calls Primary Care One, at the working poorthose making a bit more than minimum wage and incomes below the poverty linebut after the Affordable Care Act passed and many of his initial patients became eligible for Medicaid, Woods population shifted to more affluent patients whose deductibles had risen over the years.

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Here's why membership medicine is gaining physician attention - ModernMedicine

A GP’s guide to stocking your medicine cabinet – The Guardian

What should you keep to hand for minor medical emergencies? Composite: Getty/Alamy

A&E is full to bursting, GPs are stretched to breaking point there has never been a better time to treat ourselves. But, when you are unwell, the symptoms are usually at their worst in the middle of the night and that is when you discover that your so-called medicine cabinet is woefully understocked. Its the equivalent of opening the fridge when you are starving and finding nothing but a row of mouldy condiments. So whats worth keeping, chucking and buying?

Its certainly cheaper for the public purse if you self-treat. According to the Proprietary Association of Great Britain a trade association that represents UK manufacturers of branded over-the-counter (OTC) medicines, self-care medical devices and food supplements there have been more than 285m GP consultations and more than 10bn A&E visits for self-treatable conditions in the past five years. These have cost the NHS more than 10bn. However, if people had sought advice from a pharmacist in the first instance, they could have effectively treated these conditions themselves, saving them both time and hassle. Selfcare typically costs a person less than 3.50, but the cost incurred by the NHS is about 112 for each A&E treatment and 43 for a quick consult with a GP.

Of course, it goes without saying that if you are really concerned about your or your childs condition you should visit your GP, or, if you are extremely worried, your local A&E department.

The first step is to get a wall-mounted, child-proof, lockable medicine cabinet costing from around 12. The next step is to chuck out any drug that is unidentifiable, past its expiry date or is now redundant including contraceptive pills if you are pregnant and iron pills if you are no longer anaemic. OTC and prescribed drugs are frequent causes of overdose in young children. It is probably best to keep routine prescription medicines in a separate place so there is less scope for mistakes. OTC drugs should be stored in their original packaging at normal room temperature and humidity.

Thermometer A Which? report says that digital ear thermometers have largely replaced the old glass-and-mercury ones that were always hard to read, fragile and slow. Strip-type forehead thermometers arent recommended as they may not be accurate. Digital infrared no-contact thermometers are an option, too. Pointed at the forehead, they give a quick reading and can be used on small babies whose ears are too small for an ear thermometer.

Blood pressure monitor Home blood-pressure monitors are now cheap and accurate. If you feel faint or light-headed, suffer from headaches, suspect your blood pressure rises artificially when you are at the GP, or have a strong family history of high blood pressure, you can check and record serial readings at home and discuss the figures with your GP.

Peak-flow meter Anyone with asthma should have a peak-flow meter at home. It measures how effectively you can breathe out, and how severe the asthma is. Another useful gadget for anyone with breathing difficulty is a pulse oximeter that clips on to your finger and measures how much oxygen is getting around your body. Readings under 90% require medical attention.

Contact numbers The door of the cabinet is a good place to keep a note of key phone numbers; the GP surgery, an out-of-hours contact number, your local pharmacist (all numbers available on the NHS Choices website) and a reminder to dial 111 for non-emergencies and 999 for life-threatening situations.

CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) chart A simple chart showing what to do if someone collapses and stops breathing is useful in an emergency. It is no substitute for going on a hands-on course but is a good reminder, and worth sticking on the door alongside the contact numbers.

Painkiller/treatment for fever Ibuprofen is often better for treating pain than paracetamol, and just as effective in bringing down a fever. Both are suitable for children and adults in appropriate doses. Ibuprofen is best taken after food to avoid indigestion, although all oral drugs work more quickly if taken on an empty stomach. The usual caveats apply; seek medical help if pain or fever dont settle, avoid ibuprofen if you have contraindications (medical reasons not to take it), such as a past gastric ulcer, and check it doesnt interact with medication, foods or supplements you are taking. It is cheaper and safer to buy unadulterated paracetamol or ibuprofen rather than combination preparations.

Allergy treatment Antihistamines are an essential part of any medical cabinet. Cetirizine wont make you drowsy, while chlorphenamine (Piriton) makes you sleepy. Shop around; one supermarket sells the same medication for either 9p or 38p a tablet depending on the size and type of packaging. For those with a prescription, its also worth keeping a spare blue asthma inhaler (Ventolin) in case an allergy triggers wheezing and shortness of breath.

Indigestion treatment Acid reflux causes an unpleasant burning in the chest, especially after eating. It is often worse when you lie down. A slug of an antacid, such as Gaviscon, to neutralise the acid, can work wonders. The caveat here is that severe chest pain can also herald a heart attack if you belch and the pain goes away, its probably acid. If you are sweating and short of breath, it could be your heart, and you should seek urgent advice.

First-aid kit It is impossible to anticipate all eventualities, so this is my personal advice on what else to stock: some clingfilm to cover burns and scalds (after cooling the affected area with lukewarm running water); antiseptic wipes to clean dirty cuts; steri-strips to hold together gaping edges of a wound; Mepore self-adhesive dressings to cover scabs or open sores; Sudocrem as an antiseptic cream for infected spots; Golden Eye drops for sticky eyes (conjunctivitis) and tweezers for splinters.

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A GP's guide to stocking your medicine cabinet - The Guardian

Cancer breakthrough in Nebraska Medicine clinical trial – WOWT

OMAHA, Neb. (WOWT) -- Cancer, in one way or another, touches all of us. This year there will be an estimated 1.7 million new cancer cases and 600,000 deaths in the United States. But a new clinical trial at Nebraska Medicine is being hailed as a cancer breakthrough.

The last 15 months have been some of Amy Cheeses darkest days.

It started with a swollen left arm. But doctors told her, You dont have a blood clot. You have a mass in your chest.

The Fort Collins, Colorado, third grade teacher had cancer.

Its horrible to lose someone you love and go through it. We did it with my mom, Amy said.

The traditional treatments were failing; the mass inside her chest wasnt shrinking.

Probably the size of big grapefruit, Dr. Julie Vose explained.

I think Ive had 10 [scans] and not ever did I hear really positive response, Amy said.

With options exhausted, she packed up and came to Omaha for a clinical trial at Nebraska Medicine to see Dr. Julie Vose.

A lot of our patients have come from around the region, because were the only ones with this therapy regionally, Dr. Vose said.

The clinical trial called Car T-Cell Therapy and works this way: first, Amy Cheeses blood is collected and her t cells are isolated.

We all have T cells to fight infection but in a cancer patient those cells go haywire.

Her cells are then sent to a California lab to be re-engineered.

Two weeks later, the cells are returned to Omaha and given back to the Amy to fight the lymphoma. WOWT 6 News was there the day she learned if it worked.

Continuing improvement. Its now 2.7 and that means complete remission, Dr. Vose told Amy.

Oh really. Wow.

The grapefruit mass putting pressure on her heart is nowhere to be seen.

I didnt think it was ever going to happen, said Amy. Thats what everybody wants to hear. Complete remission.

This was the original PET scan before treatment. This was all lymphomathe bright spots. And then this shows its all gone. After having bad news for so many months its so good to give patients great news, Vose said.

Amy Cheese quickly texted the news to her family and friends.

She read some of the replies for WOWT 6 News:

Baaw. Oh my gosh. I love you so much. Im so excited and shaking while teaching math.

Words, words, words. I cant find them.

My oldest said, Mom Im beyond happy.

While this is early in the cancer study, its hard to avoid thinking of others who could benefit.

Were hoping the same technology can apply to different types of cancers as well, Dr Vose said.

Amy Cheese, grateful for the treatment, is already thinking shell be back in her Colorado third grade classroom this fall.

This treatment at Nebraska Medicine is for patients with non-Hodgkins Lymphoma as well as acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Its hoped this research will, one day, translate to other cancer treatments.

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Cancer breakthrough in Nebraska Medicine clinical trial - WOWT

Wonder Woman: Nutritional & Functional Medicine Therapist Dr Amel Seghouani – Huffington Post

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We interview Dr Amel Seghouani, a remarkable woman at the top of her game. She is a nutritional and functional medicine therapist based in London. She has a brilliant academic record (Fully qualified and GMC registered medical doctor,she is also trained as a Naturopath,and is a BANT Registered Nutritional Therapist as well as a Certified Gluten Sensitivity Practitioner.Dr Seghouani also holds an MBA) but above all, it is her passion for supporting patients via a holistic approach that makes her stand out. She likes to get to the root cause of the problem and once there she will do everything she can to help her patients with a drug free approach. Her mission is to empower people so that they can take charge of their own health by understanding the power of nutrition and food as medicine.

In addition to my medical degree, I have studied naturopathy and nutrition in London and I am currently going through the certification programme with the Institute of Functional Medicine to keep myself up to date and increase my knowledge in this very scientific and rapidly evolving field.My training and experience in conventional medicine has taught me many things but unfortunately, it did not teach me to see the bigger picture, which is the holistic approach.

Medical doctors are clueless about nutrition and do not know more than the general public, our training includes very little and basic information often not linked to the illnesses and how to treat them unless it is with drugs.

2. Being a medical doctor and a pharmaceutical physician for many years, how come you found interest in natural health?

Ichose to be a medical doctor to help people improve their health and fight diseases. After many years in the conventional medicine field -or western medicine as some people like to call it and after almost 20 years of working with patients and then with pharmaceutical companies on many different drugs that I truly believed would change patients lives, I started to realise the numerous limitations of conventional medicine which are unfortunately widely accepted in our western society and by the fashionable medical scientific totalitarism.

3. What are these limitations ?

What is missing in the Western Medicine is , why do we get sick in the first place ? The body underlined role is to create balance ( that we call homeostasis in the scientific world). In the Conventional medicine, every illness is based on infectious model, it is unfortunately a Pill for an ill approach rather than treating the root cause of the disease to cure the patient.

4. Why do you think Western medicine is unable to get to the root cause of illnesses ?

At medical school we are not taught to look for the root cause of the disease which is the only way we can eradicate it, it sounds very logical isnt it? . I hate to say it but despite many years of studying physiology, pathophysiology and biochemistry we do not take a holistic look at the patient.

Western medicine has divided the body into organs and many specialities and subspecialties that will often not connect with each other.But hang on, I am not aware of any organ that functions in isolation to the rest of the body. So this approach is wrong but it is unfortunately the foundation of modern medicine.

Dont get me wrong, I am not denying at all the role of western medicine in dealing with acute disease and illnesses. However, anything chronic that will require a holistic approach is unfortunately a big challenge and results in a failure since its model is only designed to treat symptoms and symptoms are not the cause of the bodys imbalance.They are just a manifestation of it and can vary from one individual to another depending on their genetic and environmental make up.This is the reason why one size fits all of drugs companies, doesnt work.

5. What does nutrition offer ?

Nutrition is the basis of everything, we all know Hippocrates famous quote about letting food be your medicine and your medicine your food?

There are 2 main causes of sickness, the first one is malnourishment : It is our intake of vitamins and minerals that allows every cell to work and every organ to do its job so that we can breath and live to enjoy ourselves.The body is able to heal itself if the right ingredients are there : Essential vitamins and minerals. Unfortunately , people think of food like fuel, just calories needed to go through the day. Modern medicine is not the only one to blame, the ill-pill model has been created to suit consumers who are seeking for a quick fix and will unfortunately remain as long as the demand is still there.

6. How is your practice different from an MD practice ?

With functional medicine I came to learn how to look for the root cause and take a holistic understanding of the body rather than segmented, it is a patient centred care: Listen to the patient. Symptoms are great because they are a sign of a dysfunction in our body but when not well understood they can be very misleading as they can overlap in many cases, so the only driver is the patient story.

I now spend an hour with patients to understand their story and it makes a huge difference. I was amazed at how small dietary changes can change people. I would have never considered this with my conventional medical training.

7. Do you have anything to add ?

I love what I do and I truly believe discovering functional medicine has changed my life, I have a better understanding of my own body and I am better equipped to help others now.I am very grateful that I finally found the right way to achieve my mission which reminds me of Rumis quote :

8. How can people connect with you or contact you ?

I run a practice in North West London, people can contact me through my website :www.DrAmelS.com. I also run workshops on various important topics to help raise awareness about health issues and provide accurate, scientific cutting edge and easy-to-understand information that will help people to make sense of all conflicting information out there on the internet. Information on these workshops is available on my website.

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Wonder Woman: Nutritional & Functional Medicine Therapist Dr Amel Seghouani - Huffington Post

ISIS targets medical school recruits in Sudan – Fox News

More than 20 British medical students at a Sudan university have abandoned their studies and joined the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq.

The students, mostly children of medical professionals from the U.K., appear to be among the largest group collectively recruited by ISIS, according to an investigative report by BritainsSunday Times.

IRAQI ARMY ENGAGES IN PSYCHOLOGICAL WARFARE: CORPSES LYING IN THE STREETS

The recruits, including three sets of siblings as well as five women, were enrolled at Sudans University of Medical Sciences and Technology in Khartoum studying to be doctors dentists and pharmacists.

Most of the students were of British-Sudanese origin.

Sudan is one of seven countries named under a travel ban to the U.S. by US President Donald Trump, just weeks after the outgoing Obama administration had said it would lift sanctions against the North African nation in response to the countrys fight against the Islamic State and other terrorist groups.

British authorities believe the recruits entered Islamic State territories in phases beginning March 2015, and most have been deployed by ISIS in medical facilities controlled by the group in Raqqa and Deir Ezzor, Syria and Mosul, Iraq.

In total, 27 UMST students and graduates are believed to have joined ISIS with at least six reported dead. Four or five of those are believed to have been from the British contingent according to The Times.

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ISIS targets medical school recruits in Sudan - Fox News