A couple of nice quick prototyping images I located:
DTJ_010566
Image by dagtj
Workshop: Great Design and style More rapidly, Day two: Paper prototyping
Rapid Prototyping China
A couple of nice quick prototyping images I located:
DTJ_010566
Image by dagtj
Workshop: Great Design and style More rapidly, Day two: Paper prototyping
A few nice precision engineering pictures I located:
Clamp Variety Knurling tool
Image by tudedude
The clamp sort of knurling tool is suggested as they put far significantly less strain on the lathe.
Identical tool as ahead of but different background and lighting, trying to boost all black pictures and to improve the detail shown.
Verify out these high precision engineering pictures:
Egyptian Obelisk – St. Peter’s Square
Image by HuTDoG83
Vibrant Rome – Photo 1 of 6
The Ancient Romans have been strongly influenced by the obelisk form, to the extent that there are now far more than twice as many obelisks standing in Rome as stay in Egypt. All fell soon after the Roman period except for the Vatican obelisk and were re-erected in distinct areas.
Re-erecting the obelisk had daunted even Michelangelo, but Sixtus V was determined to erect it in front of St Peter’s, of which the nave was but to be built. He had a complete-sized wooden mock-up erected inside months of his election. Domenico Fontana, the assistant of Giacomo Della Porta in the Basilica’s building, presented the Pope with a tiny model crane of wood and a heavy tiny obelisk of lead, which Sixtus himself was in a position to raise by turning a little winch with his finger. Fontana was provided the project.
The obelisk, half-buried in the debris of the ages, was first excavated as it stood then it took from April 30 to Might 17, 1586 to move it on rollers to the Piazza: it needed nearly 1000 males, 140 carthorses, 47 cranes. The re-erection, scheduled for September 14, the Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross, was watched by a big crowd. It was a well-known feat of engineering, which created the reputation of Fontana, who detailed it in a book illustrated with copperplate etchings, Della Trasportatione dell’Obelisco Vaticano et delle Fabriche di Nostro Signore Papa Sisto V (1590),[ten][11] which itself set a new regular in communicating technical details and influenced subsequent architectural publications by its meticulous precision.[12] Before getting re-erected the obelisk was exorcised. It is stated that Fontana had teams of relay horses to make his getaway if the enterprise failed. When Carlo Maderno came to build the Basilica’s nave, he had to place the slightest kink in its axis, to line it precisely with the obelisk.
Source: Wikipedia
Ideal viewed Huge | On Black
As often, comments/suggestions/critiques/faves are often welcome! Thank you all for viewing my photo!
A handful of good metal parts china images I discovered:
mong kok, supplies
Image by cesarharada.com
Verify out these metal parts china images:
mong kok, components
Image by cesarharada.com
mong kok, materials
Image by cesarharada.com
Check out these speedy prototyping china photos:
Speedy prototyping Protei 011 “Optimist”
Image by cesarharada.com
Verify out these stamping components china photos:
Image from web page 95 of “Sunset” (1898)
Image by Internet Archive Book Photos
Identifier: sunset74jansout
Title: Sunset
Year: 1898 (1890s)
Authors: Southern Pacific Company. Passenger Division
Subjects:
Publisher: [San Francisco, Calif. : Passenger Dept., Southern Pacific Co.] Menlo Park, CA : Sunset Publishing Corporation
Contributing Library: Web Archive
Digitizing Sponsor: Internet Archive
View Book Page: Book Viewer
About This Book: Catalog Entry
View All Pictures: All Pictures From Book
Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable on the web version of this book.
Text Appearing Before Image:
to the jaded traveler, thisdesert oasis, and a single of the grandestplaces we know of for a winter holi-day. Do you want a booklet on PalmSprings resorts? Send along a three-cent stamp then, please. Although in theSouth strategy to see all of the country.Create us for the Official Tourist Guideto Southern California, What to Doand See, and What It Will Expense. Zion NationalPark Open Travel Editor, Sunset Magazine: We are spending the winter in southern Cali-fornia. Among the trips we had planned whilethere is the 1 to Boulder Dam. We are wonder-ing ij it would he feasible to go on to Zion Na-tional Park white we are so close to? We understandit closes throughout the winter, but believed we mightbe able to see at least a component of it by driiing inand out the same day. Have you any folders onZion?—T. G., Portland, Oregon. Heretofore Zion National Park hasusually been closed throughout the winter—that is, all accommodations in thepark have been closed. Late in the fallof 1934, nonetheless, it was decided to TRAVEL
Text Appearing Right after Image:
HOW far it is!. . half the wayaround the world.Yet how near ! Twoweeks every single way onswift, modern day lin-ers—at the lowest fare in the globe thinking about serv-ice and the distance traveled. Let your self six |weeks and you can make the trip with ease. Atcost as low as practically any six weeks trip ! The |yen exchange, keep in mind, is strongly in your favor,not against you. Don’t forget too the all-inclusiveitineraries supplied at the lowest feasible expense by theJapan Tourist Bureau—trips that show you the greatcities, shrines and scenic miracles of Nippon in aweek, two weeks or more, as you decide on. jnpnn tourist burehu Address your tourist agent or the Japan TouristBureau, c/o Japanese Govt Railways, iil FifthAve., N. Y. C, or Chamber of CommerceBldg., llil South Broadway, Los Angeles, Cat.,or c/o .Nippon Yusen Kaisha, 2i Broadway,N. Y. C. Please address Dept. S in every single case tofacilitate prompt reply. TOURING MAPS Did you get your copy of the UnitedStates Touring Map as otiered last monthlor a
Note About Images
Please note that these photos are extracted from scanned web page photos that may possibly have been digitally enhanced for readability – coloration and look of these illustrations might not completely resemble the original work.
220809 Waratah
Image by Nico Nelson
The floral emblem of our state of New South Wales in Australia. Telopea speciosissima.
****See beneath from the Australian Capital Botanic Gardens Website:****
The generic name Telopea is derived from the Greek ‘telopos’, meaning ‘seen from afar’, and refers to the fantastic distance from which the crimson flowers are discernible. The certain name speciosissima is the superlative of the Latin adjective ‘speciosus’, meaning ‘beautiful’ or ‘handsome’. ‘Waratah’, the Aboriginal name for the species, was adopted by early settlers at Port Jackson.
Telopea is an eastern Australian genus of 4 species. Two are confined to New South Wales, one to Tasmania and 1 extends from eastern Victoria into New South Wales. Telopea belongs to the family members, Proteaceae, which is predominantly Australian and southern African in distribution and involves genera such as Grevillea, Banksia, Macadamia and Hakea. Protea cynaroides, King Protea, is the official floral emblem of the Republic of South Africa.
The Waratah is a stout, erect shrub which could grow to 4 metres. The dark green leathery leaves, 13-25 cm in length, are arranged alternately and have a tendency to be coarsely toothed. The flowers are grouped in rounded heads 7 to ten cm in diameter surrounded by crimson bracts, about five to 7 cm long. It flowers from September to November and nectar-searching for birds act as pollinators. Big winged seeds are released when the brown leathery pods split along one particular side.
Telopea speciosissima distribution mapThe species is fairly widespread on the central coast and adjoining mountains of New South Wales, occurring from the Gibraltar Variety, north of Sydney, to Conjola in the south. It grows mostly in the shrub understorey in open forest developed on sandstone and adjoining volcanic formations, from sea level to above 1000 metres in the Blue Mountains. Soils inside its variety have a tendency to be sandy and low in plant nutrients. Rainfall is moderately higher. Waratah plants resist destruction by bushfires, a natural element of their habitat, by regenerating from the rootstock. Flowering recommences two years right after a moderate fire.
The Waratah is a spectacular garden topic in appropriate soil and climate it flowers prolifically and tends to be long-lived. Failures can generally be attributed to the effects of unsuitable soil situations, aspect or climate. Seeds must be sown in a coarse sandy medium and quickly right after germination the seedlings ought to be transplanted into person pots of related soil. Fresh seeds germinate readily but the seedlings are prone to the fungal illness, ‘damping off’, which might be lowered by exposing the seedlings to complete light, except for the shading needed soon after transplanting. Propagation by cuttings is also attainable. In the garden, plants ought to be grown in lightly shaded to sunny positions in deep, nicely drained soil. They need to be properly watered till fully established but waterlogging should be avoided.
The Waratah responds effectively to pruning which encourages flowering the following year, and overcomes the organic tendency of the shrub to assume a straggly shape. Some pruning is achieved by cutting flowers for decoration. It is a spectacular cut flower and lasts well in water.
Flowers are typically crimson, but a rare creamy white kind, Telopea ‘Wirrimbirra White’, has been cultivated effectively as a horticultural curiosity. Manipulated hybrids of T. speciosissima have been created combining the grandeur of its flowers with the greater frost tolerance of other Telopea species. Hybrids between T. speciosissima and the Braidwood Waratah, T. mongaensis, have smaller sized flowers but are typically far more floriferous with a compact shape and appealing foliage. 1 of these hybrids is the registered cultivar, Telopea ‘Braidwood Brilliant’, a spectacular garden plant developed at the Australian National Botanic Gardens.
The Waratah occurs naturally in at least ten national parks in the geological formation, know as the Sydney Basin. Brisbane Water, Dharug and Macquarie Pass National Parks are among the places where this species is conserved. Waratahs are cultivated north of Sydney and in the Dandenong Ranges, Victoria. They are grown in Israel, New Zealand and Hawaii for the cut flower trade. It was introduced to England in 1789 but can’t survive English winters out of doors except in the south-west coastal regions, and it seldom flowers in glasshouses. It is also cultivated in California.
waratah belt buckleWhen the Australian flora started to influence artists and craftsmen of European origin, the Waratah was adopted as a motif. The Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences in Sydney has a important collection of arts and crafts featuring styles primarily based on the Waratah. The diversity of media used in the collection incorporate suede, stained glass, bone china and earthenware, glassware, copper, bronze, and wood. In 1915, R. T. Baker, a passionate advocate of the waratah (and other regional flora) as a motif in art, craft and industry, wrote:
‘The whole plant (waratah) lends itself to such a boldness of artistic concepts in all branches of Applied Art that it has couple of compeers amongst the representatives of the entire floral world…’
A little later artists like Margaret Preston utilised the bold shape of the Waratah in her hand-coloured woodcut prints.
Several government authorities and community groups in New South Wales use the Waratah in their insignia, usually adopting a stylised version of the flowerhead. It was depicted on the three shilling stamp, one of a set issued in 1959 illustrating Australian flora. Margaret Stones, an Australian botanical artist then attached to the employees of Kew Gardens, London, made the stamp. The Waratah was utilized once again on the 30 cent stamp as part of a State floral emblem set issued on ten July 1968.
Bag o’ Cash
Image by axoplasm
Chinese cash is funny for 6 motives.
1. Newer bills (after about 1999) all picture Chairman Mao, regardless of denomination.
2. There are bills for little denominations (less than 1 yuan). So there are 1, 2, and five jiao bills. A jiao is 1/ten of a yuan. This is like printing halfpenny bills.
3. The Chinese use money for everything. I have never ever noticed a check, either private or cashiers (most expats get paid in cash we get a transfer like direct deposit). And quite quite few areas take credit cards. In fact, I can consider of only two: the Marco Polo hotel, and the Esprit store.
4. The largest denomination is 100 yuan (about ). Combine this with #two (above) and you get a predicament exactly where, for instance, when you have to pay the travel agent 10,000 yuan, that means going to the bank, waiting in line for two hours (yes, that’s how extended it normally requires, in component due to the fact everyone insists on counting these [I AM NOT Generating THIS UP] bricks of cash in suitcases), filling out 4 types and photocopying your passport, and obtaining a literal BAG OF Money which all but has "$" stamped on the side. I particularly enjoy paying our rent this way.
five. The Chinese appreciate counting money. No a single trusts that they are getting the anticipated amount of money. Even when it is the FREAKING BANK that is giving it to them. Every person expects you to count all 200 bills by hand. This is basically protocol. Chinese people find out to count money by folding it at the corner and peeling by means of it really quickly. They find foreigners tediously counting money utilizing two hands truly hilarious.
6. The 100 yuan bill is PHYSICALLY a lot larger than the other denominations, and a lot bigger than non-Chinese wallets. I had to get a new wallet, for instance, WHICH I HATE. I like tiny skinny wallets but Chinese wallets are these gigantic pelvis busters.
Some cool china prototypes pictures:
BMW C1 prototype?
Image by Lars Plougmann
A few good rapidly prototyping images I identified:
The Race to Build a True-Life Version of the “Star Trek” Tricorder
Image by genphyslab
The Race to Construct a Actual-Life Version of the “Star Trek” Tricorder – General PHYSICS LABORATORY (GPL)
By Evan Ackerman
Photo: XPRIZETech From “Star Trek” Dressed in a Starfleet uniform, Tatiana Rypinski holds a replica tricorder for the duration of a photo shoot for the Qualcomm Tricorder XPrize. She leads a single of the finalist teams in the competitors.
Tatiana Rypinski is maybe two bites into her salad when she realizes it’s time for her next meeting. She gets to her feet and heads to the Biomedical Engineering Design and style Studio, a hybrid of prototyping space, wet lab, and machine shop at the Johns Hopkins University’s Homewood campus, in Baltimore. Rypinski and a couple of of her colleagues collect close to some worktables with energy outlets dangling from the ceiling. A tool cart is in 1 corner, a microscope in one more. Two three-D printers sit idle along a wall. The students have agreed to meet me right here to discuss their perform on a project whose purpose is not just inspired by science fiction—it in fact comes straight out of “Star Trek.” They want to create a medical tricorder.
In 1966, “Star Trek” introduced the tricorder as, in essence, a plot device. Like the transporter, which could “beam” individuals in between starships and planets with no asking the audience to sit via lengthy landing sequences, the tricorder could quickly diagnose healthcare circumstances and recommend treatment options, keeping the story moving. With a wave of this fictional device, a Starfleet crew member could get a complete health-related evaluation with no possessing to be admitted to the ship’s sick bay.
Right here in the true globe, although, if you have a nonemergency scenario, you may wait days—weeks, in some places—to see a doctor. And if you want laboratory tests, receiving a diagnosis can take even longer. A lot of waiting is involved, and waiting is the final factor you want to do when you’re sick. It’s even worse in the building world, where a shortage of health-related facilities and personnel implies that seeing a physician may not be an alternative at all. What we need to have is a tricorder. A genuine a single.
Rypinski is the leader of Aezon, one of the teams participating in the Qualcomm Tricorder XPrize. The competition launched in 2012, when the XPrize Foundation and U.S. chipmaker Qualcomm challenged innovators from about the planet to create a portable, consumer-friendly device capable of diagnosing a complete set of health-related circumstances. A lot more than 300 teams registered, and soon after a series of critiques, the organizers selected 10 finalists, announced last August.
This month, the final phase of the competition begins. Each and every finalist team was expected to deliver 30 working prototypes, which will now undergo a battery of tests with genuine patients. Prizes totaling US million will go to the winner and two runners-up, to be announced early subsequent year, when “Star Trek” will be celebrating its 50th anniversary.
Aezon is the youngest finalist team: All of its members are undergraduates at Hopkins. Some have by no means even observed the original “Star Trek” episodes. “My dad is a huge fan, even though,” a single student tells me. For her component, Rypinski is unfazed. “This is anything we’re doing because we love it,” she says, “and I feel that sets us apart.”
The other finalists contain high-profile startups like Scanadu, in Silicon Valley, and properly-funded health-related organizations like DNA Medicine Institute, in Cambridge, Mass., which has a partnership with NASA. 4 teams are based in the United States, and the other six are from Canada, England, India, Northern Ireland, Slovenia, and Taiwan.
Their tricorders won’t be all-powerful transportable scanners like these in “Star Trek,” but they nevertheless must demonstrate some impressive capabilities. They’ll have to diagnose 13 medical circumstances, like anemia, diabetes, hepatitis A, leukocytosis, pneumonia, stroke, tuberculosis, and urinary tract infections. In addition, teams pick three further conditions from a list that includes meals-borne illness, melanoma, osteoporosis, whooping cough, shingles, mononucleosis, strep throat, and HIV. And their systems must be capable to monitor important indicators like temperature, blood stress and oxygen saturation, heart price, and respiratory rate—not only in true time but for periods of many days as properly.
The objectives might appear impossibly hard, but XPrize believes they can be achieved, thanks to a host of fairly recent technological advances. These incorporate sophisticated machine-studying approaches applied to health-related data, price-powerful microfluidic and other lab-on-a-chip systems, and faster and more affordable laboratory tests such as rapid polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for DNA evaluation. Just as critical, there’s the popularization of individual genomics services and fitness-tracking gear, exemplifying people’s need to find out more about their bodies and health.
Simply because the enabling technologies currently exist in some kind right now, a lot of the challenge is about integrating them into a compelling program, says Grant Campany, senior director of the Qualcomm Tricorder XPrize. A tricorder isn’t intended to maintain you out of your physician’s office: It won’t be capable to treat any of the situations it can identify. But it will be capable to give you a quick and detailed image of what may possibly be the matter with you—which is significantly better than googling your symptoms and sorting via dubious medical sites, as numerous people do today.
Campany says the diseases chosen for the challenge are often not diagnosed early adequate and for that reason lead to a substantial quantity of deaths and hospitalizations: “The purpose here is to attempt to identify things as soon as possible so that men and women don’t wait and get sicker.”
Tricorder XPrize: The Final Frontier
This month, the US million Qualcomm Tricorder XPrize enters its final phase. The ten finalists listed beneath are expected to deliver a set of working prototypes to be tested with genuine sufferers. The winner will be announced early next year.
Aezon (Rockville, Md.)
Students from Johns Hopkins University are creating a 3-element program that consists of a smartphone app, a vitals monitoring device worn about the neck, and a lab unit to analyze samples of blood, urine, and saliva.
Cloud DX (Kitchener, Ont., Canada)
The private business’s dozen or so engineers and scientists are creating Vitaliti, a vitals monitor worn about the neck. The group’s tricorder will also include an earpiece and lab evaluation unit with smartphone integration.
Danvantri (Chennai, India)
Backed by technology firm American Megatrends India, Danvantri (named for the Hindu god of medicine) is augmenting its commercially offered B.OL.T. electronic blood stress cuff with a suite of modular sensors for its tricorder.
DMI (Cambridge, Mass.)
DMI plans to integrate its advanced diagnostic technique (which won XPrize’s Nokia Sensing XChallenge in 2014 and will undergo trials on the International Space Station) with a wearable vitals patch.
Dynamical Biomarkers Group (Zhongli City, Taiwan)
Sponsored by smartphone manufacturer HTC, DBG is a group of Taiwanese and U.S. engineers and physicians. It is constructing a tricorder based on a sensor suite and imaging technique to analyze vitals and samples of blood and urine.
Final Frontier Health-related Devices (Paoli, Pa.)
Three brothers and a sister—with backgrounds in medicine, engineering, and personal computer science—form the core of Final Frontier. Their tricorder contains a handheld device that utilizes optical sensors to avoid the require for blood samples.
MESI Simplifying Diagnostics (Ljubljana, Slovenia)
MESI is a startup founded by a group of physicians and engineers. Its tricorder consists of a health-related-grade wristband, a smartphone app, and a couple of diagnostic modules for identification of distinct illnesses.
Scanadu (Moffett Field, Calif.)
With Scout, a handheld vitals scanner, Scanadu reached a record .six million in crowdsourced funding in 2013. For its XPrize tricorder, the team could enhance Scout and combine it with a wearable device and a lab test kit.
SCANurse (London)
A diagnostic medical manufacturer, SCANurse is hoping to develop a tricorder that is “minimally invasive,” employing sensors and laptop vision whenever feasible alternatively of asking patients to supply blood or urine.
Zensor (Belfast, Northern Ireland)
The team is focusing on a wearable electrocardiogram sensor that also measures vitals like respiration rate and temperature. Diagnostics on blood and urine will be performed by a miniature microspectroscopy lab.
It’s late February, and Aezon is reaching a critical phase of its project. Rypinski tells me the team has a number of operating components but now requirements to combine them into a total method that can be delivered to the organizers in just 3 months. There’s a restricted amount that she’s prepared to share with me about her group’s tricorder Aezon, like most other XPrize competitors, is maintaining its technologies heavily under wraps.
Nevertheless, it’s secure to say the a variety of systems will most likely work in a comparable style. How? Say you’re feeling ill. Most tricorders will probably consist of an application running on a telephone or tablet as the main user interface. The app—a sort of AI doctor—will start by asking you a series of inquiries: Do you have a headache? Are you feeling dizzy? Did you vomit? It could also ask you about your age, weight, height, and healthcare history.
Next, it will collect your vitals, measured by a sensing device you wear on your body—a fitness tracker–style wristband, or possibly an electronic necklace. (The competitors calls for this monitor to be in a position to collect data for 72 hours, even whilst you sleep.) Based on your answers and essential signs, the app could ask you to perform some added tests. These you will do making use of yet one more piece of hardware, a type of “lab in a box” unit, which will be in a position to perform certain diagnostic tests utilizing samples of saliva, urine, or blood.
Finally, soon after getting the test results and crunching all the other information, the app will give you a diagnosis and direct you to more details such as dependable medical resources or help groups for individuals with that illness. It may also include a “call your doctor” button, or it may even dial an emergency quantity.
Some teams are building devices that you could error for a “Star Trek” prop. Scanadu, before it joined the XPrize competitors, ran a extremely profitable crowdfunding campaign to develop Scout, a sleek white disc you place against your forehead. Packed with sensors, the little device measures heart rate, skin and core physique temperature, respiration rate, blood pressure and oxygen saturation, and electrocardiogram (ECG) information. For the XPrize, it’s unclear regardless of whether the company will use the exact same device or improve it, perhaps coupling it with a wearable accessory that can collect information over longer periods.
Canadian group Cloud DX has designed a futuristic-hunting plastic collar to measure vital signs. The U-shaped device wraps about your neck, and its extremities have electrodes that sit over your chest to record your heart’s electrical activity. Its tricorder also consists of a lipstick-size scanning wand for skin and ear exams that its creators say “Dr. McCoy would be proud of,” referring to the USS
Enterprise‘s chief healthcare officer.
Sitting in the Biomedical
Engineering Style Studio, Rypinski and her colleagues appear definitely exhausted, and it seems like they’re operating on small much more than determined enthusiasm. She tells me that following reading about the tricorder competitors in 2012, she sent e-mails to various departments at Johns Hopkins—known for its powerful biomedical engineering program—to see if anybody was interested in forming a team. A lot of men and women showed up for the 1st handful of meetings. The difficult component was finding individuals who would come back. “Over time, the folks who had been truly interested in the project stuck with it,” she says, “and right here we are.”
For the competitors, Aezon adopted a divide-and-conquer strategy. The 30 or so group members formed tiny groups to investigate person ailments and establish which information they needed to effectively diagnose every of them.
Two of Rypinski’s colleagues—Alex Kearns, a mechanical engineering student, and Akshay Srivatsan, a laptop science student—tell me they have developed a smartphone-based diagnostic app that operates “the way a medical doctor thinks.” To do that, the app relies on a machine-learning approach known as a naive Bayes classifier, which is commonly employed by researchers developing such healthcare-diagnostic applications. The concept is to adjust the probability of a given diagnosis every single time the method receives a new piece of data, which may possibly consist of symptoms, vitals, or lab benefits.
To collect important signs from individuals, some Aezon group members created a monitoring device to be worn around the neck. Its creators decided to kind an independent firm, Aegle, to raise funds and market the monitor separately following the competitors.
For some of its tests, Aezon has partnered with the Johns Hopkins BioMEMS & Single Molecule Dynamics Lab. The group is hoping that some micro- and nanoscale molecular analysis methods not too long ago created at the lab could be employed in a quickly and low-cost diagnostic test of blood samples.
For other tests, though, the group is turning to simpler technologies. Cyrus Zhou, a biophysics key, and Ned Samson, a mechanical engineering student, are operating on a test for leukocytosis, which is an elevated white blood cell count. “Initially, we had been going to make a microfluidic device,” says Samson. “But from the folks we talked to, it’s like a Ph.D. to do that.”
The students found a commercially available chip that causes blood cells to spread out, creating them easier to see. They’re now trying to combine the chip with a set of lenses that can act as a easy and affordable optical microscope. Their plan is to use the camera on the smartphone and Aezon’s app to count white blood cells with laptop vision. “It’s got every little thing,” says Samson. “It’s small, it’s expense effective, it’s doable.”
Between June and December of this year, XPrize will assess the teams’ prototypes at the UC San Diego Medical Center. The effort will involve recruiting nearly 500 people—three customer testers per device, per condition—to acquire a representative outcome for every condition with each tricorder.
The winning team will be the one particular that has the highest health assessment score (primarily based on the tricorder’s potential to correctly identify the condition that the user has) while also getting among the five teams with the highest “consumer experience” score (primarily based on the tricorder’s aesthetic appeal, ease of use, and functionality).
“These devices must be in a position to function in such a way that a typical individual with some understanding of smartphones ought to be capable to understand how to operate them,” says Campany, the Tricorder XPrize director. “We’ve put 45 % of the score on the consumer expertise, since that’s how essential we think it is.”
This assessment won’t be a clinical trial, which would be far more challenging. Even if some of the tricorders operate nicely, there will still be a lengthy list of queries that will need to have to be answered prior to the devices can be commercialized. Are they safe? Do they keep a user’s medical information private? Who’s liable if there’s a misdiagnosis?
A month following my pay a visit to to Johns Hopkins, I verify in with Rypinski to see how items are going. Aezon has finalized the design of its tricorder and is now tweaking its elements to make positive they work nicely with each other and offer a cohesive user encounter. Rypinski doesn’t know how she will really feel when the prototype ultimately ships to XPrize—and there’s practically nothing far more that her team (or any of the other teams) can do, apart from wait for the benefits of the consumer testing. Proper now she can barely locate time to consume lunch.
“We have a really tight deadline to meet,” she says. “After that, we’ll have all the time in the planet.”
Tricorder stand-in
Your Smartphone
Can a smartphone tricked out with gizmos and apps replace a doctor’s classic diagnostic tools? We’ll quickly discover out. Capitalizing on the impressive sensors and processing energy in today’s smartphones, startups are turning them into mobile diagnostic and monitoring instruments for both consumers and health care workers. As capable as some of these innovations currently are, it’s unclear regardless of whether they will pass muster with government regulators, which is why many of their makers are not but touting them as bona fide medical devices. —Sarah Lewin
Pediatrics
Infant Essential-Indicators Checker
The Owlet Wise Sock keeps tabs on an infant’s heart rate and blood-oxygen levels. LEDs shine red and infrared light via the foot, and sensors measure how that light is absorbed by oxygen-carrying hemoglobin molecules in arterial blood. The sock transmits this information more than Bluetooth to a base station and to the smartphone of the nearby (and presumably anxious) parent.
Cost: US (offered for preorder)
Ophthalmology
Eye Examiner
The Transportable Eye Examination Kit (PEEK) adds a lens adapter to the smartphone’s camera. Overall health care workers in remote locations can then use the phone to scan a patient’s retina for disease and to verify for cataracts. Associated smartphone apps can be employed to test the patient’s vision.
Cost: £70 (accessible for preorder not available in the United States)
Otology
Eardrum Inspector
The Oto turns an iPhone into an otoscope that utilizes the phone’s camera to view the eardrum at high magnification. With the house version, parents can send photos of their youngsters’s eardrums to on-contact clinicians to diagnose middle-ear infections. A pro version allows medical doctors to share images with their individuals.
Price: US for the Oto Property (at present available only in California) 9 for the Oto Clinic
Cardiology
An ECG in Your Telephone
With the AliveCor Heart Monitor, a patient with a heart condition can gather a individual electrocardiogram, a record of the heart’s electrical activity. While the patient touches electrode-carrying sensors attached to the telephone’s case, an connected app displays the patient’s heart rate and flags irregular rhythms known as atrial fibrillations. The app also transmits information to the patient’s physician.
Value: US
Illustrations: James Provost
Psychology
One thing to Watch More than You
Mental-health clinicians can use the Mobile Therapy app to maintain tabs on individuals amongst sessions. The app makes use of self-reports, linguistic evaluation, and smartphone sensors to gather data about the patient’s feelings, behaviors, movements, and interactions with other men and women. It then relays this data to the clinician, who can appear for trends and spot problems signs.
Price: US per year for a clinician
This report originally appeared in print as “The Race to Build a Genuine-Life Tricorder.”
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Internet Thingies
Image by TonZ
Experimental gadgets in our household about the ‘Internet of Things’
Check out these speedy prototype china images:
Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center: P-40 Warhawk & F-4 Corsair hanging over the SR-71 Blackbird, among other people
Image by Chris Devers
Quoting Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum | Curtiss P-40E Warhawk (Kittyhawk IA):
No matter whether recognized as the Warhawk, Tomahawk, or Kittyhawk, the Curtiss P-40 proved to be a effective, versatile fighter during the initial half of Planet War II. The shark-mouthed Tomahawks that Gen. Claire Chennault’s "Flying Tigers" flew in China against the Japanese remain amongst the most popular airplanes of the war. P-40E pilot Lt. Boyd D. Wagner became the very first American ace of World War II when he shot down six Japanese aircraft in the Philippines in mid-December 1941.
Curtiss-Wright constructed this airplane as Model 87-A3 and delivered it to Canada as a Kittyhawk I in 1941. It served until 1946 in No. 111 Squadron, Royal Canadian Air Force. U.S. Air Force personnel at Andrews Air Force Base restored it in 1975 to represent an aircraft of the 75th Fighter Squadron, 23rd Fighter Group, 14th Air Force.
Donated by the Exchange Club in Memory of Kellis Forbes.
Manufacturer:
Curtiss Aircraft Firm
Date:
1939
Country of Origin:
United States of America
Dimensions:
All round: 330 x 970cm, 2686kg, 1140cm (10ft 9 15/16in. x 31ft 9 7/8in., 5921.6lb., 37ft four 13/16in.)
Materials:
All-metal, semi-monocoque
Physical Description:
Single engine, single seat, fighter aircraft.
• • • • •
See far more photos of this, and the Wikipedia article.
Particulars, quoting from Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum | Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird:
No reconnaissance aircraft in history has operated globally in much more hostile airspace or with such complete impunity than the SR-71, the world’s fastest jet-propelled aircraft. The Blackbird’s functionality and operational achievements placed it at the pinnacle of aviation technology developments in the course of the Cold War.
This Blackbird accrued about 2,800 hours of flight time throughout 24 years of active service with the U.S. Air Force. On its final flight, March 6, 1990, Lt. Col. Ed Yielding and Lt. Col. Joseph Vida set a speed record by flying from Los Angeles to Washington, D.C., in 1 hour, four minutes, and 20 seconds, averaging 3,418 kilometers (two,124 miles) per hour. At the flight’s conclusion, they landed at Washington-Dulles International Airport and turned the airplane over to the Smithsonian.
Transferred from the United States Air Force.
Manufacturer:
Lockheed Aircraft Corporation
Designer:
Clarence L. "Kelly" Johnson
Date:
1964
Country of Origin:
United States of America
Dimensions:
General: 18ft five 15/16in. x 55ft 7in. x 107ft 5in., 169998.5lb. (5.638m x 16.942m x 32.741m, 77110.8kg)
Other: 18ft five 15/16in. x 107ft 5in. x 55ft 7in. (5.638m x 32.741m x 16.942m)
Supplies:
Titanium
Physical Description:
Twin-engine, two-seat, supersonic strategic reconnaissance aircraft airframe constructed largley of titanium and its alloys vertical tail fins are constructed of a composite (laminated plastic-kind material) to decrease radar cross-section Pratt and Whitney J58 (JT11D-20B) turbojet engines function massive inlet shock cones.
• • • • •
Quoting Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum | Vought F4U-1D Corsair :
By V-J Day, September 2, 1945, Corsair pilots had amassed an 11:1 kill ratio against enemy aircraft. The aircraft’s distinctive inverted gull-wing design and style permitted ground clearance for the huge, three-bladed Hamilton Standard Hydromatic propeller, which spanned far more than 4 meters (13 feet). The Pratt and Whitney R-2800 radial engine and Hydromatic propeller was the largest and one particular of the most effective engine-propeller combinations ever flown on a fighter aircraft.
Charles Lindbergh flew bombing missions in a Corsair with Marine Air Group 31 against Japanese strongholds in the Pacific in 1944. This airplane is painted in the colors and markings of the Corsair Sun Setter, a Marine close-support fighter assigned to the USS Essex in July 1944.
Transferred from the United States Navy.
Manufacturer:
Vought Aircraft Organization
Date:
1940
Nation of Origin:
United States of America
Dimensions:
All round: 460 x 1020cm, 4037kg, 1250cm (15ft 1 1/8in. x 33ft 5 9/16in., 8900lb., 41ft 1/8in.)
Supplies:
All metal with fabric-covered wings behind the major spar.
Physical Description:
R-2800 radial air-cooled engine with 1,850 horsepower, turned a 3-blade Hamilton Common Hydromatic propeller with strong aluminum blades spanning 13 feet 1 inch wing bent gull-shaped on each sides of the fuselage.
Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center: F-four Corsair & P-40 Warhawk
Image by Chris Devers
Quoting Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum | Curtiss P-40E Warhawk (Kittyhawk IA):
Regardless of whether identified as the Warhawk, Tomahawk, or Kittyhawk, the Curtiss P-40 proved to be a profitable, versatile fighter throughout the 1st half of World War II. The shark-mouthed Tomahawks that Gen. Claire Chennault’s "Flying Tigers" flew in China against the Japanese remain among the most common airplanes of the war. P-40E pilot Lt. Boyd D. Wagner became the first American ace of Globe War II when he shot down six Japanese aircraft in the Philippines in mid-December 1941.
Curtiss-Wright built this airplane as Model 87-A3 and delivered it to Canada as a Kittyhawk I in 1941. It served until 1946 in No. 111 Squadron, Royal Canadian Air Force. U.S. Air Force personnel at Andrews Air Force Base restored it in 1975 to represent an aircraft of the 75th Fighter Squadron, 23rd Fighter Group, 14th Air Force.
Donated by the Exchange Club in Memory of Kellis Forbes.
Manufacturer:
Curtiss Aircraft Business
Date:
1939
Country of Origin:
United States of America
Dimensions:
All round: 330 x 970cm, 2686kg, 1140cm (10ft 9 15/16in. x 31ft 9 7/8in., 5921.6lb., 37ft four 13/16in.)
Supplies:
All-metal, semi-monocoque
Physical Description:
Single engine, single seat, fighter aircraft.
• • • • •
Quoting Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum | Vought F4U-1D Corsair:
By V-J Day, September 2, 1945, Corsair pilots had amassed an 11:1 kill ratio against enemy aircraft. The aircraft’s distinctive inverted gull-wing design and style permitted ground clearance for the huge, 3-bladed Hamilton Regular Hydromatic propeller, which spanned more than four meters (13 feet). The Pratt and Whitney R-2800 radial engine and Hydromatic propeller was the biggest and a single of the most strong engine-propeller combinations ever flown on a fighter aircraft.
Charles Lindbergh flew bombing missions in a Corsair with Marine Air Group 31 against Japanese strongholds in the Pacific in 1944. This airplane is painted in the colors and markings of the Corsair Sun Setter, a Marine close-assistance fighter assigned to the USS Essex in July 1944.
Transferred from the United States Navy.
Manufacturer:
Vought Aircraft Organization
Date:
1940
Nation of Origin:
United States of America
Dimensions:
General: 460 x 1020cm, 4037kg, 1250cm (15ft 1 1/8in. x 33ft five 9/16in., 8900lb., 41ft 1/8in.)
Supplies:
All metal with fabric-covered wings behind the main spar.
Physical Description:
R-2800 radial air-cooled engine with 1,850 horsepower, turned a 3-blade Hamilton Common Hydromatic propeller with strong aluminum blades spanning 13 feet 1 inch wing bent gull-shaped on both sides of the fuselage.