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NemoCare, wearables to help newborns stay safe

Based in India, NemoCare focuses on technology to reduce infant and maternal mortality rates in developing countries. TechCrunch talked to co-founder and CTO Manor Sanker about NemoCare’s portable and low-cost wearable for newborns, which monitors vital signs and connects to a platform that alerts medical teams when a baby needs help. TechCrunch is a leading…

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Based in India, NemoCare focuses on technology to reduce infant and maternal mortality rates in developing countries. TechCrunch talked to co-founder and CTO Manor Sanker about NemoCare’s portable and low-cost wearable for newborns, which monitors vital signs and connects to a platform that alerts medical teams when a baby needs help.

TechCrunch is a leading technology media property, dedicated to obsessively profiling startups, reviewing new Internet products, and breaking tech news.

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4 Comments

4 Comments

  1. Ayoub Mouzoun

    May 26, 2020 at 8:39 pm

    Could you guys tell me how a medical device is built from start to finish. I mean,how would someone build one from finding a problem to solve to designing it and manufacturing to commercialzing it. And also Wich roles are involved in this process. Thank you.

  2. Ayoub Mouzoun

    May 26, 2020 at 8:40 pm

    Wondering how much time it took them to develop this device?

  3. Lisa

    May 26, 2020 at 9:51 pm

    that’s a hairy baby!

  4. Alexander Jóhönnuson

    May 27, 2020 at 11:21 pm

    Wasn’t a similar device on Kickstarter some years ago?

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CNET

The Ocean Cleanup’s 100th Plastic Extraction Event: Everything That Happened in 7 Minutes

From the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, see the environmental organization, Ocean Cleanup complete its 100th plastic extraction from start to finish. Check out The Ocean Cleanup: 0:00 Intro 0:55 Camera Positions on the Ship 1:46 Attaching the Retention Zone to the Ship 2:26 Pulling the Retention Zone onto the Ship 2:53 Retention Zone Full of…

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From the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, see the environmental organization, Ocean Cleanup complete its 100th plastic extraction from start to finish.

Check out The Ocean Cleanup:

0:00 Intro
0:55 Camera Positions on the Ship
1:46 Attaching the Retention Zone to the Ship
2:26 Pulling the Retention Zone onto the Ship
2:53 Retention Zone Full of Plastic coming on the Deck
4:37 Preparing to Drop the Plastic onto the Deck
5:15 Cranes Lifting the Plastic to Dump it on the Deck
6:00 100th Plastic Extraction Falling onto the Ship’s Deck
6:40 Boyan Slat’s Reaction to the 100th Plastic Extraction

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#theoceancleanup #oceanplastic #plasticpollution #pollution

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Popular Science

Popular Science Predicted The Year 2000 (it went badly)

What happens when scientists and futurists predict the year 2000… in the 1960s? In Popular Science, Walter Cronkite chronicled the state of science and technology in 1967 to project what life might be like in the 21st century. Cronkite and the prognosticators actually got a lot of it right… and some of it they got…

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What happens when scientists and futurists predict the year 2000… in the 1960s? In Popular Science, Walter Cronkite chronicled the state of science and technology in 1967 to project what life might be like in the 21st century. Cronkite and the prognosticators actually got a lot of it right… and some of it they got very, very wrong.

Everyone knew the moon landing was imminent, but why didn’t we ever get networks of road magnets interfacing with our cars? And although Cronkite and Popular Science were eerily accurate on GPS and car navigation systems, why were we so misguided on the future of robots?

It turns out that the future we need isn’t necessarily the one we seem to want.

#science #Predictions #Innovation #popularscience #history

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Science & Technology

Synapse’s collapse could spell trouble for nearly 100 fintech startups | TechCrunch Minute

After years of missteps and struggles, the banking-as-a-service fintech Synapse officially has gone bankrupt. When a banking or financial startup fails, ordinary people get hurt. According to Synapse’s filings, up to 100 fintechs and 10 million customers could be impacted. But as industry expert Jason Mikula told TechCrunch, some customers using Synapse operate small businesses,…

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After years of missteps and struggles, the banking-as-a-service fintech Synapse officially has gone bankrupt. When a banking or financial startup fails, ordinary people get hurt. According to Synapse’s filings, up to 100 fintechs and 10 million customers could be impacted. But as industry expert Jason Mikula told TechCrunch, some customers using Synapse operate small businesses, meaning that the impact of Synapse’s collapse could be even more widespread than we think.

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