Mondragon Unibertsitatea ha organizado la jornada BilbAPP que se celebrará el 7 y 8 de junio en Bilbao Berrikuntza Faktoria. Asimismo, se aprovechará la jornada para presentar el Máster en Aplicaciones Móviles que Mondragon Unibertsitatea pondrá en marcha el curso que viene para formar profesionales en el ámbito mobile.
only able to recall a fraction of them at any given moment. As many as 40,500 patients die annually in an ICU in the U.S. as a result of misdiagnosis, according to a 2012 Johns Hopkins study. British entrepreneur Ali Parsa believes that artificial intelligence can help doctors avoid these mistakes.
Hot on the heels of PushDoctor’s $8.2 million Series A, another U.K. startup playing in the digital health app space has picked up funding. Babylon Health, which like PushDoctor, lets you have video consultations with a doctor (and a lot more), has raised a $25 million Series A round led by Investment AB Kinnevik, the Swedish listed investment fund.
Estos premios vienen a poner en valor la importancia de las aplicaciones turísticas en la planificación, durante la estancia y después del viaje.
La Sociedad Estatal para la Gestión de la Innovación y las Tecnologías Turísticas (SEGITTUR) en colaboración con la Feria Internacional de Turismo (FITUR) ha convocado el concurso 'The AppTourism Awards 2015' para aplicaciones turísticas en dispositivos móviles, con lo que se quiere reconocer la importancia que las apps han adquirido para los turistas en la organización del viaje.
Lift, the mobile app incubated by Twitter co-founders’ Obvious Corp., launched last year to help people build healthier habits and achieve their goals by offering a simple way to track your progress while supported by a social community who provide pushes, motivation and positive reinforcement to keep users on track. Today, Lift is expanding its set of support options to focus on more serious goal setters with the introduction of a paid coaching model in version 2.0 of the app, out now.
An Israeli medical device is making inroads into the $12 billion diabetes monitoring and insulin delivery market.
There are hundreds of glucose meters on the market – needed by diabetics to measure their blood sugar levels and determine how much insulin they need to administer – but the Dario system is one of just a few that uses smartphones to manage the meter itself.
In a 24/7 world, sleep is increasingly becoming a luxury, to the great detriment of millions around the world. In the US alone one out of every three people will experience an extended period of insomnia at some point in their lives, impacting their health and costing the economy billions due to lost wages and productivity.
Now, an Israeli start-up called SleepRate has a solution that it says will help people sleep more efficiently and take maximal advantage of the hours they do have to sleep, even if they can’t get the full allotment recommended by experts.
In just a few months, individuals who cannot use their limbs due to conditions like ALS, paralysis, Parkinsons, multiple sclerosis and spinal cord injuries will be able to – some for the first time in many years – make phone calls, surf the internet, read and send email, even play games, all on their cellphones.
The Sesame Phone, a product of Israeli computer vision and gesture technology research, will enable those suffering from near-paralysis to interact with their smartphones like anyone else, said the Sesame Phone’s inventor, Oded Ben-Dov.
Techstars startups have been making their pitches to investors in Boulder for eight years now. It’s unlikely one has ever been introduced by a police officer.
Water provider Mekorot has adopted FieldBit’s field-service app for Epson Moverio glasses – a winning combination, says FieldBit CEO.
Israel has just scored a string of firsts in the smart glasses sector. Mekorot, Israel’s water company, is the first firm in the world to equip a large number of its field workers with smart glasses – Epson’s Moverio BT-200 devices. It’s also the first to be deploying an app to provide assistance and conduct monitoring of the workers.