Archive for the ‘electronics’ category: Page 17
Jul 13, 2019
The 80-Year-Old CrossFitter | TRULY
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: electronics, transportation
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BIRTHDAY celebrations are usually a time for decadence and partying until the small hours – that is unless you’re a fitness obsessed octogenarian! Jacinto Bonilla, 80, from New York, celebrated his eightieth birthday on 3 July by completing 80 double-unders on a jump rope, followed by 80 squats, 80 push-ups, 80 pull-ups, 80 wall ball shots, 80 kettlebell swings, 80 deadlifts with a 90-pound weight – ending with another round of 80 double-unders. Every year since he turned 69, the so-called “grandfather of CrossFit” has added one rep to his brutal trademark birthday workout – the Jacinto Storm. Follow his story here:
https://www.instagram.com/crossfit1939
Jul 11, 2019
ideaXme — Eugene Borukhovich, Global Head, Digital Health Incubation (G4A) at Bayer — Ira Pastor
Posted by Ira S. Pastor in categories: aging, big data, bioengineering, biotech/medical, business, computing, drones, electronics, finance, health
Jul 8, 2019
Surgery restores arm function in some paralysed patients: study
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: biotech/medical, electronics
Surgeons in Australia have managed to restore arm function in paralysed patients, allowing them to feed themselves, use tools and handle electronic devices, according to the results of a groundbreaking study released Friday.
Thirteen young adults who had suffered spinal injuries rendering them tetraplegic underwent several operations and intense physiotherapy in the largest ever application of a technique known as nerve transfer surgery.
A team of surgeons succeeded in attaching individual nerves from above the zone of the spinal injury to nerves below the trauma site. The functioning nerves were then used to stimulate paralysed muscles below the injury zone.
Jul 4, 2019
SpaceX camera captures incredible view of rocket part returning to Earth
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: electronics, space travel
Jun 28, 2019
Engineers report a new low-power lighting technology
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: electronics, energy
Researchers from the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology and Lebedev Physical Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences have designed and tested a prototype cathodoluminescent lamp for general lighting. The new lamp, which relies on the phenomenon of field emission, is more reliable, durable, and luminous than its analogues available worldwide. The development was reported in the Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology B.
While LED lamps have become commonplace, they are not the only clean and power-saving alternative to incandescent lamps. Since the 1980s, engineers around the world have been looking into the so-called cathodoluminescent lamps as another option for general lighting purposes.
Shown in figure 1, a lamp of this kind relies on the same principle that powered TV cathode-ray tubes: A negatively charged electrode, or cathode, at one end of a vacuum tube serves as an electron gun. A potential difference of up to 10 kilovolts accelerates the emitted electrons toward a flat positively charged phosphor-coated electrode—the anode—at the opposite end of the tube. This electron bombardment results in light.
Jun 27, 2019
Balanced single-pixel camera with noiselet sampling
Posted by Richard Christophr Saragoza in category: electronics
Is your television watching you?
Single-pixel cameras (SPC) are image capturing devices, which use only a single detector to collect information about the entire image, by making use of it.
Jun 20, 2019
New technique makes it possible to see around corners
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: electronics
Computer vision researchers report using special light sources and sensors to see around corners or through gauzy filters, letting them reconstruct the shapes of unseen objects.
Jun 14, 2019
Introducing Bio Well Camera GDV Camera GDV BIO Well Camera GDV
Posted by Richard Christophr Saragoza in category: electronics
The 21st Century version of the Kirlian camera is now called a GDV camera.
Application de l’effet Kirlian — Méthode GDV du Professeur Konstantin KOROTKOV
Continue reading “Introducing Bio Well Camera GDV Camera GDV BIO Well Camera GDV” »
Jun 10, 2019
The Emerging World of Touchless Biosensors
Posted by Richard Christophr Saragoza in categories: electronics, wearables
Biosensors can also be sprayed.
A new touchless world of biosensing is emerging, and its implications are unequivocal. What does this mean for wearables, telehealth, and research?