swann
SwannBuddy 4K Video Doorbell review: Let the robots run the house
Higher-resolution video, improved overall performance, and an exciting new AI-powered voice response make Swann's second video doorbell a winner. Swann, a longtime player in the security camera world, has been spreading its wings to expand into related smart home gear, including video doorbells. Its first SwannBuddy Video Doorbell, a lackluster release, hit in 2022. The all-new SwannBuddy 4K Video Doorbell expands that device's resolution and image quality considerably, resolving one of the original product's biggest shortcomings. The SwannBuddy 4K offers a familiar design to both the original SwannBuddy and most video doorbells, with a large doorbell button in the center of the device, ringed with light (briefly blue, turning red when recording), a camera lens up top, and a motion sensor at the bottom.
Secret CIA program claimed to have found alien civilization on dark side of the moon: 'They look like us'
As the US prepares to send astronauts back to the moon, a CIA file has resurfaced that claims to have found life there more than 25 years ago. In the 1970s and 80s, the CIA conducted experiments with individuals who claimed they could perceive information about distant objects, events, or people, a process known as'remote viewing.' The experience of remote viewer Ingo Swann was first revealed in 1998 when he explained how his psychic episode took him to the dark side of the moon, a region that always faces away from Earth and out of sight from human eyes. That's where the remote reviewer made a shocking discovery: towers, buildings, and human-like aliens working at a secret complex on the moon's surface. Disturbingly, Swann said government officials knew the aliens had a base there, and these humanoids could actually sense his presence as he viewed them with his mind from 238,000 miles away.
- Asia > China (0.06)
- North America > United States > New York (0.05)
- North America > United States > District of Columbia > Washington (0.05)
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New artificial intelligence models show potential for predicting outcomes
New applications of artificial intelligence (AI) in health care settings have shown early success in improving survival and outcomes in traffic accident victims transported by ambulance and in predicting survival after liver transplantation, according to two research studies presented at the virtual American College of Surgeons Clinical Congress 2020. Both studies evaluated how AI can crunch massive amounts of data to support decision-making by surgeons and other care providers at the point of care. In one study, researchers at the University of Minnesota applied a previously published AI approach known as natural language processing (NLP) to categorize treatment needs and medical interventions for 22,529 motor vehicle crash patients that emergency medical service (EMS) personnel transported to ACS-verified Level I trauma centers in Minnesota. According to a 2016 study by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, 20 percent of medical injury deaths are potentially preventable representing a quality gap the researchers sought to address. Reviewing the performance of EMS teams to profile potentially preventable deaths can enable quality improvement efforts to reduce these deaths.
New artificial intelligence models show potential for predicting outcomes
CHICAGO: New applications of artificial intelligence (AI) in health care settings have shown early success in improving survival and outcomes in traffic accident victims transported by ambulance and in predicting survival after liver transplantation, according to two research studies presented at the virtual American College of Surgeons Clinical Congress 2020. Both studies evaluated how AI can crunch massive amounts of data to support decision-making by surgeons and other care providers at the point of care. In one study, researchers at the University of Minnesota applied a previously published AI approach known as natural language processing (NLP)1 to categorize treatment needs and medical interventions for 22,529 motor vehicle crash patients that emergency medical service (EMS) personnel transported to ACS-verified Level I trauma centers in Minnesota. According to a 2016 study by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, 20 percent of medical injury deaths are potentially preventable2 representing a quality gap the researchers sought to address. Reviewing the performance of EMS teams to profile potentially preventable deaths can enable quality improvement efforts to reduce these deaths.
- North America > United States > Minnesota (0.48)
- North America > United States > Illinois > Cook County > Chicago (0.25)
- North America > United States > District of Columbia > Washington (0.05)