Posted on

The Valley Hospital Among the First in the Nation to Use Miniature Implantable Heart Monitor Expected to be a Game Changer for Patients, Doctors

Heart-inplant

Cardiac Electrophysiologist Dan L. Musat, M.D., attending physician at Valley’s Arrhythmia Institute, with the newly approved miniature heart monitor.

The Valley Hospital Among the First in the Nation to Use Miniature Implantable Heart Monitor Expected to be a Game Changer for Patients, Doctors

February 25, 2014 — The Valley Hospital is among a handful of hospitals in the nation and the first in New Jersey to implant a newly approved tiny wireless heart monitor that is expected to have a very real impact for patients and doctors.

Indicated for use as a diagnostic tool for people suffering from unexplained fainting, dizziness, palpitations or shortness of breath, the device can also help doctors determine if a patient has atrial fibrillation, the most common form of heart rhythm abnormality.

Nick Rotonda, of Upper Saddle River, was the first patient to receive the device at Valley and is counting on it to monitor whether he has any signs of atrial fibrillation or flutter, which could increase his risk for a stroke.  Rotonda underwent a procedure at Valley last December to correct his abnormal heart rhythm, and his doctors want to monitor him to make sure he is maintaining normal rhythm.

About one-third the size of a AAA battery and almost 90 percent smaller than similar devices on the market, the device, the LINQ Reveal implantable cardiac monitor, is slipped just beneath the skin with a syringe-like device through an incision that is less than ½ an inch in length.  It continuously and wirelessly monitors the heart for up to three years and notifies physicians if patients have significant cardiac events between regular medical appointments.  It is also MRI-compatible, allowing patients to undergo magnetic resonance imaging if needed.

“It takes about 5 minutes to implant the device using a local anesthetic,” said Cardiac Electrophysiologist Dan L. Musat, M.D., attending physician at Valley’s Arrhythmia Institute, part of the Valley Heart and Vascular Institute.  “There is no need for general anesthetic, the device is not visible in most patients, and patients go home after about an hour,” said Dr. Musat, who performed Valley’s first procedure on Mr. Rotonda.

The device has the ability to communicate wirelessly via a small tabletop remote monitoring station while patients sleep, allowing them to continue living their lives normally, even away from home.

“This is one of the most innovative new technologies to emerge in cardiology in the last decade,” said Suneet Mittal, M.D., and Director of the Electrophysiology Lab at Valley.  “It is so discreet that most patients will not even know it is there and can go about their lives without interruption or discomfort from the device,” Dr. Mittal said.  “It truly is a game changer.”
“I know that atrial fibrillation can increase my risk for a stroke, and this monitor gives me peace of mind because I know that if I have an episode the monitor will alert my doctor so he can address it,” Mr. Rotonda said.

The LINQ Reveal is made by Medtronic and was approved for use by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration this month (February 2014).

Microsoft Store

Posted on

First contagious WiFi computer virus goes airborne, spreads like the common cold

293675_2437934432374_1692756907_n

First contagious WiFi computer virus goes airborne, spreads like the common cold

Computer science researchers have demonstrated for the first time how a digital virus can go airborne and spread via WiFi networks in populated areas at the same pace as a human diseases.

The “Chameleon” virus, designed by a University of Liverpool team, showed a remarkable amount of intelligence by avoiding detection and breaking into personal and business WiFi networks at their weakest points — spreading at an alarming rate.

Network Security Professor Alan Marshall said the virus doesn’t try to damage or disrupt established networks — instead, the virus slips in unnoticed to collect the data and log-in information of all users connected to the network via WiFi, and seeks other WiFi networks through them — a much more subtle, sinister and dangerous objective.

“WiFi connections are increasingly a target for computer hackers because of well-documented security vulnerabilities, which make it difficult to detect and defend against a virus,” Marshall said in a ScienceBlog report. “It was assumed, however, that it wasn’t possible to develop a virus that could attack WiFi networks — but we demonstrated that this is possible and that it can spread quickly.”

The secret to Chameleon is the method by which it avoids detection. Traditional computer antivirus programs look for viruses present on computers and the Internet itself. Chameleon sticks strictly to WiFi networks, bypassing secured, more heavily encrypted networks to enter and spread through weaker ones — especially free public access points like those found in cafes, on trains and in airports.

Read more: https://dailycaller.com/2014/02/25/first-contagious-wifi-computer-virus-goes-airborne-spreads-like-the-common-cold/#ixzz2uQHqGcIp

Posted on

School district sees virtual day as a success

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

School district sees virtual day as a success

TUESDAY FEBRUARY 25, 2014, 7:51 AM
BY  MARY DIDUCH
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

Pascack Valley seeks state approval

The New Jersey Department of Education may not yet have officially granted the Pascack Valley Regional High School District credit for its “virtual school day” a week and a half ago – as it is still analyzing data from the day – but the district’s administration and students appear to already be viewing the day as a success.

Teachers and students from both the district’s high schools – Pascack Valley High School and Pascack Hills High School – worked from home one snow day about a week and a half ago instead of taking a day off.

The district already had exhausted its snow days, and allowing the students to work from home could be a future solution to having students make up the day later in the year.

However, while the state gave the district permission to go ahead with the “virtual school day” two days before a snowstorm closed schools, a ruling has yet to be made on whether the virtual day will count as one of the 180 mandatory school days.

Superintendent Erik Gundersen said in his report at a Board of Education meeting Monday night that the state’s Department of Education has yet to get back to the district about whether the day will count officially.

But Gundersen said he is optimistic.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/247041201_School_district_sees_virtual_day_as_a_success.html#sthash.iy8PW3He.dpu

Posted on

Forget the Internet – soon there will be the OUTERNET: Company plans to beam free Wi-fi to every person on Earth from space

TSDSTTR PA062

Forget the Internet – soon there will be the OUTERNET: Company plans to beam free Wi-fi to every person on Earth from space

An ambitious project known as Outernet is aiming to launch hundreds of miniature satellites into low Earth orbit by June 2015
Each satellite will broadcast the Internet to phones and computers giving billions of people across the globe free online access
Citizens of countries like China and North Korea that have censored online activity could be given free and unrestricted cyberspace
‘There’s really nothing that is technically impossible to this’

By Daily Mail Reporter

PUBLISHED: 09:24 EST, 5 February 2014 | UPDATED: 09:49 EST, 5 February 2014

You might think you have to pay through the nose at the moment to access the Internet.

But one ambitious organisation called the Media Development Investment Fund (MDIF) is planning to turn the age of online computing on its head by giving free web access to every person on Earth.

Known as Outernet, MDIF plans to launch hundreds of satellites into orbit by 2015.

And they say the project could provide unrestricted Internet access to countries where their web access is censored, including China and North Korea.

Read more: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2552177/Forget-Internet-soon-OUTERNET-Company-plans-beam-free-wi-fi-person-Earth-space.html#ixzz2tbFE87jl

Posted on

26th Annual Super Science Saturday March 8th

super_sciencesaturday_theridgewoodblog.net_

file photo

26th Annual Super Science Saturday March 8th

Billed as “the greatest science extravaganza in northern New Jersey,” this year’s presentations will take place on Saturday, March 8 from 9 a.m.-1:30 p.m. at RHS. All district students are invited to present.

Held at Ridgewood High School – Saturday, March 8th from 9AM to 1:30PM Super Science Saturday, the greatest science extravaganza in northern New Jersey, is an annual event held for youth and adults to join in the excitement of science. Now in our 26th year, some of the many interactive exhibits include outdoor rocket launches, paper airplane contests, a 26 foot egg drop challenge, and a professional science show by The Franklin Institute

Super_Science_-Saturday_theridgewoodblog.net_

 

file photo

A workshop series for student presenters will be offered from 4-6 p.m. on Friday, February 14; Friday, February 28; and Thursday, March 6 in the Benjamin Franklin Middle School Cafeteria. To sign up for the series, contact Heather Cohen at 201-300-2900 or email her at Workshop@SuperScienceSaturday.org not later than January 31. The cost is $25. Participation is limited to 25 students.
Click here for the SSS workshop flyer.

Click here for more information about Super Science Saturday and the schedule of events.

Super Science Saturday is sponsored by the Ridgewood Education Foundation and The Valley Hospital.

TRAVELL SCHOOL SCIENCE FAIR IS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC ON MARCH 6

All are welcome to Travell School on Thursday, March 6 from 7-8:30 p.m., to view the Travell School student science projects. Please mark your calendars and plan to attend.

Save 20% on Valentine's Day Flowers & Gifts at 1800flowers.com. Use Promo Code: HEARTTWNTY at checkout (Offer Ends 02/09/14)show?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=216823

Posted on

Earthlings unite to confront the asteroid menace

dinodeadcrash

Earthlings unite to confront the asteroid menace

The first meeting of an international group tasked with figuring out how to react to asteroids that threaten our very existence is set for next week.

by Eric Mack
January 31, 2014 10:09 AM PST

Next week in Germany, representatives of all mankind’s space-faring nations will get together in a room to begin coordinating efforts to prevent the end of the world…or at least to figure out how to identify and prevent really big space rocks from smacking us around like that meteor that hit Russia last year.

We’ve all watched those scenes in science fiction movies where the leaders of the planet (or planets) all sit around a large table and come to a consensus about the best way to confront the latest existential threat. I’m always left wondering where the heck they get such a huge table, and how they managed to come up with a unanimous plan of action in less than 5 minutes. It’s a little different from the endless gabfest of political posturing translating to minimal real-world action that is a meeting of today’s United Nations.

Or is it? The first ever meeting of the Space Mission Planning and Advisory Group (SMPAG, pronounced “same page” — see what they did there?) set to be hosted by the European Space Agency on February 6 and 7 sounds a little more like the Hollywood version of consensus-making, just with less melodrama and fewer ridiculously beautiful people everywhere.

https://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-57618150-1/earthlings-unite-to-confront-the-asteroid-menace/

Posted on

Fishbein: Planning for the future

RHS_Snow_theridgewoodblog.net_-300x225

Fishbein: Planning for the future
Friday, January 31, 2014
By DANIEL FISHBEIN
COLUMNIST

Over the next year, you’ll be hearing more and more about a new district plan that promises to make a dynamic impact on our mission of excellence. Called 1:1 (One to One), it’s an initiative that aims to partner the tools of technology with the skills of our professional educators with the goal of raising student success to new levels.

The 1:1 program planned for Ridgewood is designed to enhance instruction and improve learning by supplying one computer device to every student, for use both in the classroom and at home. This is not a new idea – in fact, two Bergen County high schools have had 1:1 instruction in place for the past eight years. But it is a concept which time has come for the Ridgewood Public Schools.

How does 1:1 differ from the technology already in place in Ridgewood classrooms? A while ago the Board of Education adopted a formal goal to integrate computer technology into our learning environment and as a result, we have longstanding policies and programs in place at this point in time, with numerous computers in our buildings available for use by our students and teaching staff.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/education/242882241_Fishbein__Planning_for_the_future.html#sthash.dCuPOKyp.dpuf

Posted on

Breakthrough discovery creates stem cells in a flash

stem-cell-harvest

Breakthrough discovery creates stem cells in a flash
Wednesday January 29, 2014, 11:27 PM
BY  MONTE MORIN
LOS ANGELES TIMES
The Record

In a feat that experts say is a significant advance for regenerative medicine, scientists have discovered a surprisingly simple method for creating personalized stem cells that doesn’t involve human embryos or tinkering with DNA.

Two studies published Wednesday in the journal Nature describe a novel procedure for “reprogramming” the blood cells of newborn mice by soaking the cells in a mildly acidic solution for 30 minutes. This near-fatal shock caused the cells to become pluripotent, or capable of growing into any type of cell in the body.

When the reprogrammed cells were tagged and injected into a developing mouse, they multiplied and grew into heart, bone, brain and other organs, the scientists found.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/health/Breakthrough_discovery_creates_stem_cells_in_a_flash.html#sthash.EO9TlGCy.dpuf

Posted on

70% of occupations could become automated over next 30 years

images-2

70% of occupations could become automated over next 30 year

Is 2014 the year YOUR job will be taken by a robot? ‘Jobocalpyse’ set to strike as droids are trained to flip burgers, pour drinks – and even look after our children

Scientists predict a ‘jobocalypse’ as robots take over manual jobs
A huge 70% of occupations could become automated over next 30 years
Drivers, teachers, babysitters and nurses could be replaced by robots
Could mean the end of the eight-hour, five-day working week

By MARK PRIGG

PUBLISHED: 12:04 EST, 20 January 2014 | UPDATED: 16:32 EST, 21 January 2014

Experts are predicting a ‘jobocalypse’ as robots take over manual jobs, while scientists at Cambridge warn that machines should have their intelligence limited to stop them outsmarting us.

A new version of the movie RoboCop (out February 12) shows us a future where technology revolutionises law enforcement, but that is just the tip of the iceberg for robotics.

‘I believe we are the inflection point where robotics are going to change everything you know and do,’ says Ben Way, author of Jobocalypse, a book about about the rise of the robots, told MailOnline.

Read more: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2542113/Will-robot-jobocalypse-make-YOU-obsolete-2014-year-droid-takes-job-say-experts.html#ixzz2r819YqKr

Posted on

Meditation apps aim to lift the spirits, calm the stressful

meditation page pic

Meditation apps aim to lift the spirits, calm the stressful

By Natasha Baker | Reuters

TORONTO (Reuters) – In a bad mood but not sure why? New smartphone apps provide short guided meditations designed to help users return to a positive state of mind.

Stop, Breathe & Think, a free iPhone app, prompts people to check how they are feeling mentally, emotionally and physically and will recommend three guided meditations between five and 10 minutes long.

“We wanted to give people a friendly and accessible tool to develop these skills – something they could easily integrate into their daily routine,” said Jamie Price, executive director of Tools for Peace, a California-based non-profit which developed the app.

It aims to help people feel more grounded, calmer and happier, he added, and to recognize emotions and impulses and to react positively.

https://ca.news.yahoo.com/meditation-apps-aim-lift-spirits-calm-stressful-194219283.html