Daily Archives: June 28, 2017

What we can learn about global flu evolution from one person’s infection – Medical Xpress

Posted: June 28, 2017 at 6:20 am

June 27, 2017 A new study using 10-year-old samples finds parallels between individual and global flu evolution patterns. Credit: Kim Carney / Fred Hutch News Service

A new study has found that flu evolution within some individuals can hint at the virus's eventual evolutionary course worldwide.

Samples taken more than 10 years ago from people with unusually long flu infectionsand analyzed recently using modern genome sequencing methodsrevealed certain viral changes that matched global flu evolution trends several years later.

The study, published in the journal eLife, tracked how flu evolved over time in four people who were especially vulnerable to unusually severe viral infections: bone marrow transplant patients. For people with healthy immune systems, a typical flu infection lasts about a week, said Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center evolutionary biologist and doctoral student Katherine Xue, first author on the study. So she and her colleagues at the Hutch, Seattle Children's Research Institute and the University of Washington studied viruses that originated from patients who received transplants and developed severe flu infections that lasted two or more months.

These four patients were drawn from a group of nearly 500 transplant recipients who participated in a previous study led by Fred Hutch infectious disease researcher Dr. Michael Boeckh, also a co-author on Tuesday's study. That large study began in 2005 to improve understanding about the sometimes devastating impact of respiratory viruses in this vulnerable populationin fact, two of the four patients whose samples were analyzed in the current study went on to die of their infections.

Knowing what the flu virus does in a single infected person is important, Xue said, but it's difficult to study because the typical flu infection is so short. Most research tracks how the virus changes on a global rather than on an individual level.

"We know that flu changes really quickly, from year to year," said Xue, who is also a student in the University of Washington's genome sciences department. "All that evolution has to start somewhere. It has to start with individual mutations that arise within people while they're sick."

The flu's limited evolutionary options

The flu virus's rapid evolution is the reason we need a new flu vaccine every year. Through infections or vaccination, our immune systems build up cellular memories of past flu encounters, driving the virus to mutate so it can get around that immune blockade to continue infecting the same people year after year, said Fred Hutch evolutionary biologist and senior author on the paper Dr. Jesse Bloom.

But the virus is limited in its evolutionary potential. Mutations happen at random, and most that crop up will break or weaken the virus; only a handful of those changes allow the flu to slip past well-armed immune systems.

The researchers used a modern genetic sequencing technique, known as deep sequencing, to capture the complete genetic information from the thousands of different viral particles contained in a single patient's sample. They then followed the viruses as they changed from week to week during the patients' long infections. Some viral mutations petered out, but some "fixed" in each patient, meaning strains carrying that mutation eventually took over the entire population of viruses in that person's body. When a mutation fixes, that ensures the next person infected will also get that particular flu strain.

When they first started their analysis, they weren't expecting to find similarities between the four patients, Xue said. Their study had a more general aim: to understand how the flu evolves in an individual person. But they were surprised to find that some of the same mutations fixed in more than one patient. And they knew from other teams' research studying the global evolution of flu that some of those mutations would go on to take over the worldwide population as well, years after the strains had fixed in the cancer patients.

That doesn't mean that the same viral strains that later swept the world got their start in these few patients, Bloom said. Rather, it points to the few evolutionary paths available to get around people's immune systems.

"The viruses keep hitting on a relatively small number of solutions to this problem they face," Bloom said. "Mutations that [eventually] spread around the world come up over and over."

What would it take to build a flu forecast?

The researchers think the cancer patients' flu evolution predated the virus's global changes by so many years in part because these four people had such long infections. With a standard, weeklong infection, the virus has less of a chance to evolve because only a few hundred viruses out of the millions present in one person's body are transmitted to the next infected person, Xue said.

Those short infections and that transmission bottleneck lead to a "stop and start process of evolution," she said. In effect, the virus's evolution may be accelerated in patients with longer infections.

But it's also possible that favorable viral mutations appear in individual people years before they are able to take over the entire world's population of viruses. And that possibility hints that individual infections could, one day, be used to forecast flu's global evolution.

Predicting the mutations that take over the world would improve vaccine design, Xue said. Currently, researchers associated with the World Health Organization pick flu strains to include in each year's vaccine about 9 months before the next flu season starts, allowing sufficient time for vaccine production. It's a sophisticated and well-researched process, but it doesn't always capture the correct strains for a given flu season. Methods to better predict which viral strains will dominate each year could result in more effective vaccines.

The research team's next step is to understand whether they can see these early hints of global viral evolution in people with average-length infections. That will take a lot more than just four infections, Xue said. But the data is already out there, ready to be analyzed. Through the WHO's monitoring efforts, thousands of flu samples are taken around the world every year, and, increasingly, those samples are analyzed with the same deep sequencing methods that would allow such detailed analyses.

A unique group of four

The samples used in the study don't reflect the typical flu infectionbut they do underscore the importance of better understanding the virus. Influenza can be deadly for transplant patients. Because their immune systems can take up to a year to rebound after the procedure, those who undergo transplants are especially susceptible to easily transmittedand often mildinfections like the common cold and flu.

Normally, doctors do not bother tracking and analyzing colds and flu in healthy people. But at Fred Hutch's clinical care partner Seattle Cancer Care Alliance and many other cancer centers, patients who come down with a respiratory virus are followed very carefully because of the danger these infections pose. Colds and flu can lead to pneumonia and even death in many transplant patients.

In the original study, the patient volunteers, who all received transplants at SCCA, donated weekly swabs from their nose and mouth for as long as their infections lasted. With the volunteers' consent, extra material from those samples was stored in Fred Hutch freezersin case it could be useful for future research.

"We're incredibly grateful that these people who are undergoing really difficult treatments are still willing to participate in studies," Xue said. "The original study was conducted 10 years ago, and now that we have new methods, some of these original samples are bearing fruit in a way that we could never have imagined."

Dr. Steven Pergam, co-author on the study and a Fred Hutch infectious disease researcher and director of Infection Prevention at SCCA, also highlighted the patients' contributions to this study. Understanding how the virus affects this small group has led to knowledge that could impact anyone at risk from the flu, he said.

"These patients who are contributing samples are most at risk for complications from the flu," Pergam said. "It's a real testament to the patients who are willing to do this kind of research."

Next up, Xue and Bloom are interested in understanding how patients' immune systems change in response to an evolving virus. They would be able to pursue that approach using blood samples donated by the same patients whose viral samples they studied.

Such research could lay the groundwork for better treatment options for his patients at the SCCA, Pergam said.

"We need new treatments; we need better options for therapy; we need better vaccines to prevent patients from developing flu," he said. "This basic science work is incredibly valuable."

Explore further: Common cold can be surprisingly dangerous for transplant patients

More information: Katherine S Xue et al. Parallel evolution of influenza across multiple spatiotemporal scales, eLife (2017). DOI: 10.7554/eLife.26875

Angela P. Campbell et al. Clinical Outcomes Associated With Respiratory Virus Detection Before Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant, Clinical Infectious Diseases (2015). DOI: 10.1093/cid/civ272

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What we can learn about global flu evolution from one person's infection - Medical Xpress

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Serena Williams’s Style Evolution: From Tennis Phenom to Fashion Insider – Vanity Fair

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Vanity Fair
Serena Williams's Style Evolution: From Tennis Phenom to Fashion Insider
Vanity Fair
Serena Williams is one of the greatest athletes to ever hit a tennis court, and she's also steadily become a formidable force in fashion, both on and off the court. The Vanity Fair cover star is a front row mainstay at fashion shows all over the world ...
'But Seriously,' Tennis Great John McEnroe Says He's Seeking 'Inner Peace'NPR

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PETYA Darwinism applied to cyberspace – CSO Online

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By John Bryk, CSO | Jun 27, 2017 11:27 AM PT

Opinions expressed by ICN authors are their own.

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On the morning ofJune 27th, reports began surfacing of widespread attacks against Ukrainian critical infrastructure sectors that included aviation, banking, and electricity. An unknown malware had begun affecting IT systems in these sectors. Business systems were made unavailable and normal processes stopped. Fortunately, no operational technology, the technology that runs the energy grid, was reported to be affected.

Affected systems were widespread. They included Ukrenergo, the countrys electric transmission company, and Kyivenergo, the distribution company serving the Kiev region, While Ukrenergy reported no outages, Kyivenergy was forced to shut down all administratve systems, awaiting permission from the Ukraines Security Service (SBU) before restarting.

Others victims in Ukraine and internationally included:

The attack occurred, probably not by chance, only hours after the car bombing murder of Col. Maxim Shapoval of the Ukraine Chief Directorate of Intelligence and a day before Ukraines Constitution Day.

The offending malware was soon identified at PETYA, PETRYA, or PETwrap, depending upon the source. PETYA reportedly utilized the the NSAs leaked EternalBlue, the same Windows SMBv1 vulnerability as WannaCry, PETYA does not initially encrypt individual files, but replaces the master boot record (MBR), leaving the entire system unusable. Should the MBR not be available, it then goes on to encrypt the individual files.

Perhaps the most valuable lesson we can learn from this attack is that Charles Darwin was right. It's survival of the fittest; right along with that goes the smartest. Unless some completely new vector is discovered in action with this new threat, victims of PETYA have no excuse. The SMB vulnerability in question had been patched by Microsoft prior to WannaCry's May outbreak. During the WannaCry outbreak, Microsoft provided additional patches for legacy operating systems, those no longer supported by normal updates, like Windows XP and Server 2003. Even with these extraordinary measures to provide users with the protection they needed, some failed to update and/or patch.

Those who failed to take action and install patches handed to them on a silver platter are now victims of PETYA, and themselves sources of the new infection to others. Akin to a neighbor with a garage full of dynamite, this is the kind of negligence that endangers the entire cyber neighborhood.

Information Sharing and Analysis Centers (ISACs) in the U.S. were able to get ahead of the infection thanks to early warning and quick action. The Downstream Natural Gas and Electric ISACS combined forces to collect, analyze, and alert their sector members, providing early indicators and even links to algorithms successfully used to earlier decrypt the PETYA ransomware. Having just recently experienced the WannaCry worm, their members were patched and defended. There were no reports of infection in electric or downstream natural gas sectors.

This article is published as part of the IDG Contributor Network. Want to Join?

John Bryk retired from the U.S. Air Force as a colonel after a 30-year career, last serving as a military diplomat in central and western Europe and later as a civilian with the Defense Intelligence Agency. As the intelligence analyst for the DNG-ISAC, he focuses on the protection of our nation's natural gas critical cyber infrastructure.

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Blueye Robotics Is Pioneering the Underwater Drone – The Drive – The Drive

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While drones are increasingly affordable, they're also starting to be found in more places than just above our heads. We recently covered MIT's efforts to have drones not only traverse the sky but tread on land, and are now seeing a Norwegian company dipping their proverbial toesand literal dronesinto the oceans.

Blueye's Pioneer is a "remote operated vehicle" ROV) drone equipped to descend as far as 450 feet and record and stream 1080p videos at 30 frames per secondall while being remotely controlled through a videogame console controller or through your smartphone. It doesn't stop there, eitherthe Pioneer was specifically designed to be used in tandem with a virtual reality (VR) headset, which would allow users to immerse themselves into the experience as much as the Pioneer immerses itself into the seas.

With a purposefully lower price point than all other ROVs of its kind, as user-friendly as possible, and clocking in at a mere 18 pounds, the Pioneer will likely be the de facto underwater hobby drone to aim for. BlueyeCEOEric Dyrkoren said that this was exactly his goal bringing professional underwater drone tech to the people.

"We wanted to make this technology available to many more people, weve been focusing on the design, the control system, and the camera," said Dyrkoren. "Its like playing a video game. Its very easy to use and the video streaming is in real-time, we have very low-latency."

There's been a massive demand for the combination of drones and VR, and it seems like the Pioneer was birthed from not only a wish to make these underwater drones more affordable, but to capitalize on that niche of drones and gaming we're all so fond of.

According to TheNextWeb, the Pioneer can be simply chucked into the ocean and easily started therein. There's no need for a hub, a base, and it's been tested for resilience and quality assurance for quite some time now. The Pioneer was even deployed in the Arctic, to test its mettle in harsh conditions like below freezing temperate and choppy waters.

Preorders have already begun for the ROV. You can check the product out in further detail here, before the item starts shipping next year, according to Blueye's CEO. We'll definitely keep an eye on this thing, as it seems like the first, true hobby underwater drone that some of us could actually afford. Stay tuned.

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4 Katy ISD robotics teams competing – Chron.com

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Texas Robotics Invitational will be June 30-July 1 at Strake Jesuit.

Texas Robotics Invitational will be June 30-July 1 at Strake Jesuit.

4 Katy ISD robotics teams competing

Four robotics teams from Katy Independent School District high schools will be competing at the Texas Robotics Invitational (TRI) at Strake Jesuit College Preparatory, 8900 Bellaire Blvd., June 30-July 1.

They are among 38 high school teams from around the country who will compete with their 120-pound robots that they have designed and built.

Representing Katy ISD will be CRyptonite from Cinco Ranch High School, Nutz and Boltz from Morton Ranch High School, Robospartans from Seven Lakes High School and Steel Talons from Tompkins High School. The event will include matches and workshops. Free admission from 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Visit http://spectrum3847.org/TRI for information.

Tournament organizer and Spectrum 3847 Coach Allen Gregory said, "TRI is one of the largest summer robot tournaments in Texas. We want families to come to learn that S-T-E-M is the key to unlocking the future and think about starting a robotics program in their schools. TRI showcases some of the top high school talent in the country. See enthusiastic high school students compete with their 120-pound robots in an action-packed matches."

TRI is an off-season event in Houston and is planned and organized by Spectrum FRC#3847 with the help of Houston area teams, and volunteers."

Spectrum FRC #3847 is made up of high school students from St. Agnes Academy and Strake Jesuit College Preparatory.

For more information on the TRI, contact Gregory at TRI@spectrum3847.org or 360-390-5244.

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Mop Top robotics camp offered to Clinton creators – Sampson Independent

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Jackie Johnson, founder of Mop Top Shop, Inc., educates local students about robotics.

Grace Robinson makes a presentation during a camp hosted by Mop Top Shop, Inc.

Mickey Woodberry speaks to his peers about his idea for a robot.

Jackie Johnson enjoyed watching little engineers come up with some creative ideas for robots.

Andrews Chapel Baptist Church is hosting a robotics camp with Mop Top Shop, Inc. Based out of Raleigh, the program exposes children to STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics). In addition to locations throughout North Carolina, Mop Top has traveled to Washington, D.C. for the White House Easter Egg Roll, an event hosted by President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama.

The week-long session at the church was the camps first time coming to a Clinton location. Johnson, program founder, assisted children with through hands-on activities. The students created ideas for inventions to help society using construction paper and other craft items. During presentations, some of assistance involved helping sick people, putting out fires, home building and teaching math. While creating, students also gave their work a price.

Participant Grace Robinson had fun learning about different parts and making her invention called HCMR.

It stands for Helpful Cleaning Maid Robot, she said. It cleans and it helps you with anything. If you you didnt feel like cooking, it would cook for you.

Johnson, a Garland native, participates in local parades and events with several mascots, including the leader Mop Top The Hip Hop Scientist. She recently returned to Sampson County to educate children during the summer. The first week of the camp in Garland focused on matter. Students worked with slime, homemade Play-Doh, and homemade lava lamps.

They got to experience the states of matter, Johnson said. They really enjoyed that.

Lessons focused on different parts of the robot such as the ultrasonic sensor, a device that can measure distance by using sound waves. Some of the others included the axle, bream, tracks, wires and other functions. Later during the week, they will make the real robots.

Those robots will move and those robots will be able to detect color, Johnson said. It will let them know if theres an object in front of them. I want them to know what engineers use and how they actually prototype robots for use in the real world.

Students Jayden Murphy, Shaiyana Brinson and Tyler Clyburn were fascinated about the camp and STEM. Murphys idea was called Pastorbot, which will preach if the pastor is sick or unable to be at church.

Participant Genesis Walker enjoyed the idea of making a house sitter bot and meeting new people.

Science is really fun for me because you learn how everything works, Genesis said.

Johnson said she would like for some of the students to become engineers. She hopes the camp exposed them to the possibility, if they never had the experience.

In the camp, students believe its essential for students to become hands-on. During the camp, the students made artbots using a motor inside a toothbrush, colored markers and paper cups. After completion, the robots will be able to draw for them. Later during the week, they will make the real robots.

Johnson expressed how robots are becoming more essential in society. One example was the automobile industry which uses technology for mass production. The students were given a homework assignment on the Henn-na Hotel in Japan, which is fully staffed by robots.

Robots are going to replace a lot of jobs and we have to be prepared and educated, so that we dont lose out, Johnson said. I want these kids to be competitive in the real world.

Jackie Johnson, founder of Mop Top Shop, Inc., educates local students about robotics.

http://www.clintonnc.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/web1_MT_3.jpgJackie Johnson, founder of Mop Top Shop, Inc., educates local students about robotics.

Grace Robinson makes a presentation during a camp hosted by Mop Top Shop, Inc.

http://www.clintonnc.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/web1_MT_2.jpgGrace Robinson makes a presentation during a camp hosted by Mop Top Shop, Inc.

Mickey Woodberry speaks to his peers about his idea for a robot.

http://www.clintonnc.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/web1_MT_1.jpgMickey Woodberry speaks to his peers about his idea for a robot.

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Israel’s Mossad sets up fund for new spy technologies, including robotics, miniaturization – The Japan Times

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JERUSALEM Israels Mossad intelligence agency has set up an investment fund to help development of new espionage techniques, and is offering grants of up to 2 million shekels (about $570,000) per project to bring in new ideas.

A government statement on Tuesday said Mossad was seeking technologies in various fields, including robotics, miniaturization and encryption as well as new automated methods of gleaning information from documents and new ways of carrying out operations more stealthily.

A statement by the new fund, called Libertad, said it would be willing to give grants of up to 2 million shekels per project in exchange for non-exclusive rights to the technology.

Developers would retain the rights to their products and would be able to sell them on, it said.

The Mossad wants to encourage innovation and creation of groundbreaking technology the technology developed will be implemented by us, in cooperation between the parties, Libertad explained in a document.

It advised potential applicants to closely observe areas of interest on its website, and said that calls for proposals would be posted publicly.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu posted a short video clip on Twitter showing possible futuristic technology and wrote: Mossad will continue to be sophisticated, daring and ground-breaking in its paramount task of ensuring Israels security.

Mossads undertaking is not new. In 1999, the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency established IQT, a non-profit investment fund aimed at accelerating the development and delivery of new technologies to U.S. government intelligence bodies.

Libertads document said anyone could apply, suggesting that the offer was open too to foreign companies though it did not give details. It added that an approved programme could be made only with an incorporated company.

Israel has over 450 cyber-security firms. In 2016, 78 start-ups raised more than $660 million from investors, according to the Israel Venture Capital Research Center.

Its advanced defense industry, led by Elbit, Israel Aerospace Industries, Israel Military Industries and Rafael, accounts for about 14 percent of the countrys exports.

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Steve Mitchell The Mind of Watercolor Blog

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At the writing of this blog, I'mabout to post a video that launches into a bit of a rant (that video is now at theend of this post). But thats enough of the rant. Check the video out below to see the complete rant. Regardless, in watercolor, [Read more]

If you follow my YouTube channel, you may have noticed that I've been uploading Strathmore Workshopvideos over the last couple weeks. These were 4 videos done for their web site last spring (2016) and aired during each week of May. This year, as per [Read more]

Ok, so I just recently posted on Skillshare an extended versionof my latest spontaneous painting with additional commentary.All said, its aboutan hour long and takes you with me through the process ofhow I approach spontaneous landscape painting [Read more]

We all want to improve as artists don't we? Growing as an artist isthe key to more enjoyment and satisfaction as we tread this adventurous but sometimes frustrating path.Practice is a given, but what happens when we get stuck and don't know how to [Read more]

Looking for cool gift ideas for the artist in your family? Or maybe you're the artistjust looking to add a little something to your own Santa's list. Here are a few of my personal picks to keep theartistic inspiration fired up. Art Supply Kits [Read more]

Veterans have servedfor a variety of reasons. For Americans, the reasons usually include the protection or our great nation, propagation of freedom and the dismantling of tyranny. While not all wars have been popular, the men and women who have [Read more]

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Searching for a Career? Set up a Free Profile at AutoCareCareers.org – PR Newswire (press release)

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Career fields in the auto care industry include accounting, customer service, engineering, finance, human resources, inventory management, manufacturing, marketing, research and development, retail, sales, sourcing, supply chain, technical support, training, vehicle repair and more.

"When people think of the auto care industry, vehicle repair often comes to mind. The truth is that our industry employs 4.6 million people in a wide variety of exciting career paths," said Courtney Hammer, director, job and career development, Auto Care Association. "If you are looking for your first job or want a career change, setting up a free profile at Auto Care Careers and uploading a resume is the first step toward connecting with hiring managers in this thriving industry."

To learn more, visit http://www.autocarecareers.org or follow Auto Care Careers on LinkedIn, Facebook, YouTube and Twitter.

About Auto Care CareersAuto Care Careers is the premier online career resource center for the auto care industry. A significant sector of the U.S. economy, the auto care industry employs more than 4.6 million people, offering a wide range of career paths from the corporate office through the distribution channel to the repair shop floor. Featuring a robust job board, in-depth resource materials and informative videos, the Auto Care Careers website connects hiring companies with high-quality job seekers. For more information, visit http://www.autocarecareers.org.

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/searching-for-a-career--set-up-a-free-profile-at-autocarecareersorg-300480457.html

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Virtual Reality Is the Future of Shopping – Lifehacker

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Online shopping is on the riseits fast and ships directly to your doorstep, sometimes overnight. But with online shopping, you miss the experience of going into a store and picking up items. Enter virtual reality shopping, which tries to give you the convenience of online shopping and the experience of being in a store.

People are already shopping through virtual reality, but its still in its beginning stages. In late 2016, Chinas Alibaba launched Buy+, a virtual reality experience that could be accessed with a virtual reality headset. With Buy+, people could wander around a store, look through items, and add things to a cart by staring at a product for long enough. According to Vice, 30,000 people had already tried Buy+ an hour after its launch.

To use virtual reality shopping, youll need a virtual reality headset, which could range from a $10 Google Cardboard to hundreds of dollars for an Oculus Rift. Like online shopping, theres usually a virtual shopping cart and you can buy things by giving your credit card information upon checkout.

Big companies like Amazon are also working on adding virtual reality shopping in an attempt to increase sales. In May 2016, Ikea let users design their own kitchens with a HTC Vive. Audi also used the HTC Vive to present cars in showrooms. Later in 2016, eBay Australia teamed up with Myer to create the first virtual reality department store, but it simulated a web of floating objects rather than a physical store.

Earlier this month, Ikea started using virtual reality in Australia. You can see the experience for yourself on Android, iOS, and desktop (though the desktop version doesnt have virtual reality).

The Ikea version of virtual reality shopping feels like a more immersive version of Google Street View. You can wander around the store and in between furniture. You can select objects marked with floating blue dots, revealing the items description and price. Most of the furniture isnt marked, though, so youll have to zoom in on the tags and remind yourself to search for it later.

Smaller companies like Gatsby, a startup that creates virtual reality stores, are also looking to create virtual reality shopping experiences.

Were really trying to get close to what its like being there, and we want it to be very intimate, said Anastasia Cifuentes, co-founder of Gatsby. All the little details on how you move, were really focusing on how to have that just right. Gatsby has been experimenting with virtual reality for less than 6 months but hopes to launch an app in the fall.

Using Gatsbys shopping app to buy furniture feels like playing a game. You can look around a room from a fixed point (you cant move around the space yet). Theres a button that let you click on objects and rotate them. Once you select an object, details about the objects length, width, height, and price appear. If you want an item, you can add it to your cart.

The demo I tested was animated rather than based on real photos, which made the experience less realistic. The app is still in development, but Gatsby hopes to use real photos of objects and rooms once the app is finished. Gatsby will be free to everyoneyoull only need something, like a Google Cardboard, to view it through.

Theres an efficiency factor that being online satisfies, but weve lost something in traveling to that, which is just being able to hold the product, said Cifuentes. There are still things we need to see and touch that we have to go to the store for, like furniture.

Virtual reality doesnt completely replicate the in-person shopping experience, but its getting there. Its also getting cheaper and more accessible: now you only need your smartphone and a $10 Google Cardboard set to experience it.

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