Saturday, February 18, 2012

Remote-Controlled Drug Device Could Deliver Chemo at Home [Science]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5886073/remote+controlled-drug-device-could-deliver-chemo-at-home

Remote-Controlled Drug Device Could Deliver Chemo at HomeSeven women suffering from osteoporosis got the chance to avoid their usual visits to the doctor for their injected medicines. Instead, their physician administered treatment remotely through an implant that pumped meds into their systems on demand while the patients rested at home.

As part of a clinical trial, the women received abdominal implants made by MicroCHIPS, a company in Waltham, Massachusetts. Over a period of four months, they delivered 20 daily doses of a hormone treatment called teriparatide, which improves bone formation and reduces the risk of fracture. The study, which was performed in Denmark, showed that the remote injections worked just as well as in-person injections.

The work was presented on the first day of the enormous annual American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting, which started yesterday in Vancouver, B.C. The research is published in the February 15 issue of Science Translational Medicine. The device has to clear two more FDA clinical trials before it's approved, which the company hopes will happen by 2016.

This seems in lots of ways like a fantastic idea. It could work for multiple sclerosis, cancer, and chronic pain, making it a lot more convenient for patients to get treatment. It also allows doctors to deliver more precise doses of medicine over time. (They say it won't work for insulin, though, to treat diabetes because the doses are too large).

I might feel a little freaked out though to have a device implanted inside my body that someone on the other side of town can control. What if someone sits on the button by accident or forgets to push it altogether? Part of the idea is that the patient is freed from having to remember to take his or her medicine, which would be really great for elderly people. I think I would like it better if I could control it myself. [AAAS via Financial Times]

Image: MicroCHIPS

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WSJ: Safari loophole lets Google track Apple users through web ads

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/02/17/wsj-safari-loophole-lets-google-track-apple-users-through-web-a/

Stanford researcher Jonathan Mayer has discovered a curious Safari loophole that allows Google to track a user's browsing activity via cookie-laced web ads. As it turns out, Apple's browser normally accepts cookies from sites that a user visits, but automatically blocks them from third-party advertisers. As Mayer found out, though, advertisers can still circumvent this filter by enticing users to interact with ads in different ways. In the case of Google, the search giant embedded a "+1" button on ads produced with its DoubleClick technology, as part of an opt-in feature for Google+ users. If a user was logged in to Google+ and had agreed to see +1 ad displays, he or she would have a cookie planted on their device, thanks to a system that sent invisible forms from Apple computers or iPhones. This made it seem as if a user actually submitted the form intentionally, thereby convincing Safari to allow cookies. These cookies were only temporary, with shelf lives of up to 24 hours, but they could open the door for many more, since Safari allows sites to plant them after having received access to install at least one.

After the Wall Street Journal notified Google of this loophole, the company promptly disabled it and duly apologized, adding that it didn't realize that its +1 system would plant tracking cookies on a user's device. "We didn't anticipate that this would happen, and we have now started removing these advertising cookies from Safari browsers," Google's Rachel Whetstone ex! plained. "It's important to stress that, just as on other browsers, these advertising cookies do not collect personal information." An Apple spokesperson, meanwhile, issued the following statement: "We are aware that some third parties are circumventing Safari's privacy features and we are working to put a stop to it."

WSJ: Safari loophole lets Google track Apple users through web ads originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Feb 2012 07:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Acer Iconia Tab family to be given Ice Cream Sandwich treatment, rolling out to A200 now

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/02/17/acer-iconia-tab-family-to-be-given-ice-cream-sandwich-treatment/

Acer's revealed that it'll be bringing Android's latest and greatest version to its existing tablet family. The update is rolling out (as promised) on the Iconia Tab A200 now, but version 4.0 will also make an appearance on both its seven inch (Iconia A100) and 10 inch (Iconia A500) relatives in April. The update adds all those ICS features, including refreshed widget design and improved multitasking, but leaves the manufacturer's own Android addition -- the Acer launcher ring -- intact.

Continue reading Acer Iconia Tab family to be given Ice Cream Sandwich treatment, rolling out to A200 now

Acer Iconia Tab family to be given Ice Cream Sandwich treatment, rolling out to A200 now originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Feb 2012 07:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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More HTC Endeavor whispers: SLCD display, thin chassis, 32GB and no microSD

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/02/17/more-htc-endeavor-whispers/

Months of rumors about the HTC Endeavor (aka the One X, Edge, Ville) have layered up to provide a pretty complete (if not totally reliable) picture of the forthcoming Tegra 3-powered Android handset. There's room for a few more brush-strokes, however, and one of MoDaCo's tipsters is happy to paint them. We're told the new handset will have a Super LCD display, despite earlier rumors of HTC flirting with AMOLED (again). This could be no bad thing, judging from the stunning 1280 x 720 panel on the Rezound, but the Endeavor is expected to have a larger 4.7-inch screen and hence a slightly lower pixel density. The thinness of the Endeavor's chassis will reportedly be a major selling point, as will be the 32GB of onboard memory that will come as standard. However, this storage won't be expandable -- the tipster says there's no microSD on the back, just a microSIM slot and an 1800mAh battery that may or may not be removable. Again, the provenance of these reports is unknown, but MoDaCo's reports have so far tallied closely with what we saw in a leaked Endeavor ROM. Assuming it's all accurate, will it be enough to give HTC the differentiating leg-up it so badly needs? We're not sure, but we do know that mor! e Beats Audio or a music streaming service won't cut it.

More HTC Endeavor whispers: SLCD display, thin chassis, 32GB and no microSD originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Feb 2012 08:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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New Swype beta fulfills the Ice Cream Sandwich promise

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/02/17/new-swype-beta-adds-ice-cream-sandwich-support/

New Swype beta fulfills the Ice Cream Sandwich promise
It may be here a bit later than the 140-character box promised, but this fresh beta version of your favorite third-party keyboard app brings along a treat you'd been begging for. Swype's latest gift to the early-adopting crowd brings along some much requested Ice Cream Sandwich support. And, although all you Gnex-rockin' folks are getting what you wanted, the beta also adds other bits like accuracy improvements, add-ons with DragonGo! as well as downloadable languages for slates. We figured all that tapping's got you fatigued, so we're hooking you up with a clickable link to the download below.

New Swype beta fulfills the Ice Cream Sandwich promise originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Feb 2012 10:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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