Showing posts with label Technological Help. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Technological Help. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

The unlikely donor to this Silicon Valley nonprofit? China.

One Silicon Valley startup is getting donations from an unlikely source: WeChat users.

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WeChat is a popular Chinese social networking app, a competitor to Facebook Messenger.

But its users aren't just texting with friends. They're also using the platform to make micro-donations to organizations like Watsi.
Watsi is a nonprofit that uses crowdfunding to cover healthcare costs for people in need. It features 10 to 20 people at a time, like a 50-year-old farmer in Nepal who needs $270 for treatment for lung disease, and an 80-year-old grandmother in Cambodia who, for $250, will be able to get cataract surgery.
Watsi's website requires donations to be a minimum $5, but donations through WeChat can be even tinier: According to Watsi cofounder Chase Adam, the average donation through WeChat is $1.41.
Adam said the WeChat donations are evidence of a larger trend: There's a growing middle class in China that's increasingly "interested in global philanthropy," he said.
They're giving what they can and it's adding up: Watsi has accumulated $200,000 in donations from WeChat donors in the past 18 months. Overall, Watsi has raised $5 million for patients in its three years.
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To identify those in need of medical treatment, Watsi pairs up with more than a dozen organizations like Hope for West Africa in Nigeria and Project Muso in Mali. To date, Watsi has helped 5,778 people in 21 countries get medical treatment.
watsi team
The Watsi team in Guatemala.
Watsi is one of the few U.S. nonprofits on WeChat's platform (the majority of the more than 2,100 nonprofits are Chinese). WeChat, which has 600 million monthly unique users, was founded byTencent (TCEHY), one of China's largest Internet providers. Tencent also happens to be an early investor in Watsi, which recently raised $3.5 million.
"I wish there were more organizations like Watsi for us to back in the U.S.," said David Wallerstein, senior executive vice president at Tencent.
Watsi was the first nonprofit to participate in Silicon Valley accelerator Y Combinator. It borrows a financing model from for-profit startups, which raise money for their operations from investors. Donations, crowdsourced from the public, always go directly to those in need.
Moreover, Watsi's mission is complete transparency. Watsi keeps a public Google document, which has 24 spreadsheets that break down everything from how it spends money to who it is partnering with.
"There aren't that many nonprofits using tech to make the world better," said Adam. "We are running an experiment to be the most transparent nonprofit in the world."
Tencent isn't the only big tech company looking to use its social networking powers for charitable giving.
This month, Facebook (FBTech30) announced a new feature that lets charities solicit donations for specific campaigns.
"If every Internet company out there is competing with whoever is the most philanthropic, we're going to be living in such a better planet," said Wallerstein.
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Google plants Star Wars Easter egg


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google star wars
Google "a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away" if you want to see the "Star Wars" Easter egg.

Google "a long time ago in a galaxy far far away," and you'll see one of the better jokes that Google has hidden in its search code.


Instead of the usual Google (GOOG) list of blue-fonted links against a sterile white background, the search term from the famous opening movie line summons a "Star Wars" style opening crawl, with the yellow-fonted links receding into space.
The Easter egg is mimicking the opening credits of the seminal 1977 film - as pretty much everyone knows, since Googling that opening line generates 435 million search results.
This is the latest in a long line of Easter eggs, which is tech slang for hidden treasures in the form of source code, that have popped up in online searches, video games and DVDs.
Google is no stranger to Easter eggs. Type in "do a barrel roll," "once in a blue moon" or "answer to life the universe and everything" to see for yourself.
For example, Google once buried an Easter egg in an otherwise conventional corporate announcement to spice it up with a reference to a fictional company. And to show support for same-sex marriage, Google displayed a rainbow flag around its search box whenever anyone typed the search words "gay" or "marriage equality."
Movies are rife with Easter eggs, and the "Star Wars" series is no exception, with the Millennium Falcon appearing in unexpected places, as well as references to an earlier (an unrelated) George Lucas film "THX 1138."
"Star Wars" fandom is escalating ahead of the next installment in the long-running franchise. "The Force Awakens," the seventh episode in the nine-film series, is in theaters Dec. 14.
Googling "The Force Awakens" doesn't reveal any Easter eggs ... yet.
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36 coolest gadgets of 2015

coolest gadgets theta ricoh
    With a tap of a button, the Theta S spherical camera can take up to 25 minutes of 360-degree videos. You can even live-stream your videos, if that's your thing.
    November 24 2015 11:07 AM ET

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    'Emotional' robot sells out in a minute

    By Angad Singh, for CNN Get_More_Follow_Us Click_Here
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    (CNN)Pepper the humanoid robot is so hot that he sold out within a minute, according to his Japanese creator, SoftBank Robotics Corp.
    Only 1,000 models were available for the consumer launch on Saturday in JapanThe base price was set at ¥198,000 ($1,600) with an additional ¥24,600 ($200) monthly data and insurance fees.

    The world's first emotional robot

    'Pepper,' a robot with emotional capabilities hugs a girl at DARPA Robotics Challenge on June 5, 2015.
    'Pepper', a robot capable of emotionally evolving and responding to its user's mood sold out in a minute during its consumer release on June 20, 2015.
    Standing just under four feet tall, and weighing 61 pounds, Pepper is designed to read emotions as well as recognize tones of voice and facial expressions in order to interact with humans. But most of all, "he tries to make you happy," Kaname Hayashi, Softbank's project manager, told CNN last year.
    With his array of cameras, touch sensors, accelerometer and other sensors in his "endocrine-type multi-layer neural network," Pepper has the ability to read your emotions as well as develop his own. He isn't a work robot, but more of an emotional companion for people.
      Pepper has his own evolving emotions which "are influenced by people's facial expressions and words, as well as his surroundings," according to SoftBank. "Pepper is at ease when he is with people he knows, happy when praised and scared when the lights go down."
      Developers admit that the robot may make mistakes, but says Pepper will learn and grow over time through his own emotional engine and collective wisdom gained through collected cloud data.
      Pepper currently has the ability to speak English, French, Japanese and Spanish. In the next few months, there will be more language releases in its app store, which already has around 200 apps.

      The business side of Pepper

      Two days prior to Peppers initial limited release, SoftBank announced a new partnership with the Apple manufacturer Foxconn and the Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, which each agreed to invest ¥14.5 billion (over $118 million) for 20 percent shares in SoftBank Robotics Holding. SoftBank envisions Pepper as a first step in spreading robotics worldwide.
      Softbank is willing to sell Pepper at a loss for the first four years, but expect the robot to bring in profits by the fifth year and become a major force in revenues 20 to 30 years in the future. Company officials stated that they want to keep Pepper affordable, and compared the price of the robot to that of a pet dog in Japan, according to a press event held last week.
      SoftBank also plans to launch "Pepper for Biz" in the fall, making the robot available for businesses and will announce details in July. Pepper has already been used to sell Nestle coffee machines in Japanese stores.
      Interested in buying your own Pepper robot? SoftBank will be releasing information about additional sales on their website in July.

      Google testing a cardiac sensor wristband

      Google is working on a wearable device that can help doctors remotely monitor patients' health.

      The connected wristband can take a person's electrocardiogram (or EKG) and assess environmental stressors, including light and noise levels.
      The "investigational device," intended for research and academic purposes, was first reported by Bloomberg Tuesday.Like_Us_Please! Click_Here
      In an email to CNNMoney, Google (GOOGLTech30) says the studies will help the company figure out how the watch-like gadget could be used to study and treat diseases.
      Activity sensors in the wristband could detect changes in a person's mobility, which would help in studying Parkinson's, for example. Physicians could also advise heart attack patients to wear the wristband after being released from the hospital.
      "Our hope is that this technology could unlock a new class of continuous, medical-grade information that makes it easier to understand these patterns and manage serious health conditions," said Andy Conrad, head of the life sciences team at Google.
      Critics of current health trackers have argued that it's difficult to measure heart rate accurately from the wrist. One reason, they say, is that devices like the Apple (AAPLTech30) Watch typically use rapidly flashing infrared light to measure blood flow changes which indicate heartbeat timing.
      "But bones, tendons, muscles, and vascular structure of the wrist can interfere with the ability to accurately measure heart rate and other biometrics during exercise," said Dr. Steven LeBoeuf, president of Valencell.
      Google's new device is able to measure electrical pulses of the heart and skin temperature.
      The life sciences team at Google is an internal healthcare technology group that is part of Google X labs, the same team responsible for driverless cars, Internet balloons, and contact lenses capable of measuring glucose levels in tears.
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      Samsung Galaxy S6 edge +

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      Big Screen, Big Entertainment

      An immersive display, breakthrough dual-edge, live video sharing in real time, and a lot of big thrills.

      The Edge of Innovation

      Peerless screen. Seamless dual edge. Breathless reactions

      Ultra-Slim, Ultra-Engaging

      Easy to hold. Not so easy to take your eyes off of.

      Content That Pops

      Adaptive Display makes sure everything bursts off the screen.

      Key Specs

      More space.More impressive. Groundbreaking Dual Edge Screen.
      Crystal clear detail.5.7" Quad HD Super AMOLED display.
      More fun in every frame.5MP front-facing, wide-angle camera.
      Great shots anywhere, every time.16MP rear-facing camera. Get_More_Follow_Us Click_Here
      Shoot like a pro.1080p full HD video recording, 720p playback.Like_Us_Please! Click_Here

      More Screen for More of Your World

      The dual edge display keeps you more connected, totally engaged, and consistently amazed.

      Tuesday, November 24, 2015

      Emails reveal Coke's influence over anti-obesity group

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      A nonprofit founded to combat obesity says the $1.5 million it received from Coke has no influence on its work. Get_More_Follow_Us

      But emails obtained by The Associated Press show the world's largest beverage maker was instrumental in shaping the Global Energy Balance Network, which is led by a professor at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. Coke helped pick the group's leaders, edited its mission statement and suggested articles and videos for its website.
      In an email last November, the group's president tells a top Coke executive: "I want to help your company avoid the image of being a problem in peoples' lives and back to being a company that brings important and fun things to them."
      Coke executives had similarly high hopes. A proposal circulated via email at the company laid out a vision for a group that would "quickly establish itself as the place the media goes to for comment on any obesity issue." It said the group would use social media and run a political-style campaign to counter the "shrill rhetoric" of "public health extremists" who want to tax or limit foods they deem unhealthy.
      When contacted by the AP about the emails, Coca-Cola Co. CEO Muhtar Kent said in a statement that "it has become clear to us that there was not a sufficient level of transparency with regard to the company's involvement with the Global Energy Balance Network."
      "Clearly, we have more work to do to reflect the values of this great company in all that we do," Kent said.
      The Atlanta-based company told the AP it has accepted the retirement of its chief health and science officer, Rhona Applebaum, who initially managed the relationship with the group. It said it will not fill the position as it overhauls how it goes about its health efforts. It also said it has stopped working with the Global Energy Balance Network.
      It's just the latest example of Coke working with outside experts to promote messages that benefit the company.

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      Android Solution

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      Tuesday, November 17, 2015

      How to attach file in gmail

      To attach a file to a message you're composing, follow the steps below:
      1. In Gmail, click the Compose button.
      2. Click the paperclip icon at the bottom of the compose window.
      3. Browse through your files and click the name of the file you'd like to attach.
      4. Click Open.