Year: 2017

Using an iPhone, a doctor finds undiscovered Cancer….In himself

“Earlier this year, vascular surgeon John Martin was testing a pocket-sized ultrasound device developed by Butterfly Network, a startup based in Guilford, Connecticut, that he’d just joined as chief medical officer,” Antonio Regalado reports for MIT Technology Review. “He’d been having an uncomfortable feeling of thickness on his throat. So he oozed out some gel and ran the probe, which is the size and shape of an electric razor, along his neck.”

“On his smartphone, to which the device is connected, black-and gray images quickly appeared. Martin is not a cancer specialist. But he knew that the dark, three-centimeter mass he saw did not belong there,” Regalado reports. “‘I was enough of a doctor to know I was in trouble,’ he says. It was squamous-cell cancer.”

“The device he used, called the Butterfly IQ, is the first solid-state ultrasound machine to reach the market in the U.S.,” Regalado reports. “Martin, who since diagnosing his cancer has undergone a five-and-a-half-hour surgery and radiation treatment, believes the devices can take on new shapes, like a patch that could be sent home with patients. Perhaps before too long a parent might diagnose a kid’s fracture at home. ‘To look at this as just an ultrasound device is like looking at an iPhone and saying it’s just a phone,’ he says. ‘If you have a window into the body where anyone can afford it, everyone can use it, and everyone can interpret it, it becomes a heck of a lot more than an ultrasound device.'”

Read more in the full article here.

After EquiFax Hack, some iPhone X orders being Held up

Some pre-order customers for the iPhone X are finding themselves being a victim of the recently discovered EquiFax hack that happened last month.  This is because some customers (or EquiFax itself) had elected to put a freeze on their credit when the credit company first announced the hack.

For those customers who had a freeze on their account, they were denied an iPhone because of it.

One such customer named Kevin Clark Tweeted as such when he found this out the hard way:

Thx for nothing @CitizensOne for using @Equifax to check my credit. No iPhone X for me. @Equifax breach...the gift that keeps on giving.

— Kevin Clark (@KC_Clarky) October 27, 2017

 

 

Best Buy shocks Customers who pre-order iPhone X through the retailer

Customers who have decided to pre-order the iPhone X via Best Buy may do a double take when they look at their invoice.

It seems that the retailer has tacked on some sort of surcharge (around $100.00 extra) to the customer's final bill.

This is not the first time that the retailer has tacked on a surcharge as they had also done it with Apple's iPhone 8 and the iPhone 8 Plus.

Best Buy customers have taken to the company's forums to express their displeasure and to ask why for the surcharge.  A Best Buy social  media rep responded with the following statement:

"I would not be able to say why our price for the unactivated iPhone 8/8 Plus are $100 more than what Apple is charging, but I can say we work to remain competitive, and we do have our price match guarantee where we would lower prices found at a competitor in most case. With that said contract phones like the iPhone 8/8 Plus do not qualify for our price match guarantee."

The rep also followed up by saying:

"Believe it or not when it comes to Apple products we have very little to say as to what price we sell their products for."

The rep seems to indicate that the surcharge is coming from Apple itself.  If this were true, then other companies would also be forced to do the same thing to its customers.

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