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Intel to unveil health care line | Planetary Gear: a CNET blog on mechanical engineerin... - 0 views

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    Intel plans to unveil a series of health care products aimed at the aging and chronically ill on November 11.
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FT.com | FT Energy Source | The sobering news about geoengineering - 0 views

  • The diagram below displays affordability and effectiveness (the top right-hand label should read ‘High effectiveness/high affordability’, not ‘low affordability’). And yes, on these measures alone, stratospheric aerosols - one of the more dramatic proposals - do pretty well:
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Geoengineering could dim lights on solar power - environment - 23 April 2009 - New Scie... - 0 views

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    PUMPING aerosol particles into the atmosphere to create a sunshade could take a heavier toll on solar power generation than expected. For every 1 per cent of the sun's rays deflected into space, the average output of solar systems that rely on direct sunlight would drop by 4 to 5 per cent, says Daniel Murphy at the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Boulder, Colorado. Geoengineers propose scattering 1 to 2 per cent of sunlight.
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Intel inside your medical care | Planetary Gear: a CNET blog on mechanical engineering ... - 0 views

  • Intel has begun pilot programs to test a home health laptop, application, and database system that puts patients remotely in sync with their health care providers. The Intel Health Guide, which includes a laptop for patients and an online interface for health care administrators, received 510(k) clearance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in July. Now Aetna, Scan Health Plan, Erickson Retirement Communities, and the Providence Medical Group in Oregon have each begun pilot programs to test how well the system works, or doesn't work, with their patients.
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    Intel has begun pilot programs to test a home health laptop, application, and database system that puts patients remotely in sync with their health care providers. The Intel Health Guide, which includes a laptop for patients and an online interface for health care administrators, received 510(k) clearance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in July. Now Aetna, Scan Health Plan, Erickson Retirement Communities, and the Providence Medical Group in Oregon have each begun pilot programs to test how well the system works, or doesn't work, with their patients.
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