Month: February 2020

Apple Watch helps save an Oklahoma Teenager’s Life

Skylar Joslin looks like a normal teenager, but he is fighting a rare battle. “I got a text message along with a screenshot of his heart rate and it was 190. The following message saying, ‘Mommy there’s something wrong. I’m not doing anything,’” Liz Joslin, Skylar’s mother, said. Skylar was in class when he got a notification on his Apple Watch and immediately knew something was wrong. “I was kind of worried about it because I didn’t realize it and it was saying something was wrong with my heart,” he said…

Skylar was diagnosed with a condition called supraventricular tachycardia. It causes a rapid heartbeat that weakens the heart over time. He underwent nearly eight hours of surgery to fix his heart’s rhythm. Skylar is back on the [football] field with a device that monitors his heart. He also wears his Apple Watch every day and tells others about how the device saved his life. “My science teacher… she got one because of it,” he said.

Via:KFOR/CNN

Did you know: You cannot use Messenger for Mac when texting to another non-iPhone user?

The other day, I had to text a non-iPhone user.  For connivance, I sent the message via my Mac.

Expecting to see the familiar "Delivered" message come up - it didn't.  So I assumed she would get the message eventually.  After a while, I get a message from messenger stating that the message did not get delivered.  So, I tried it again, and the same thing happened.

Then I tried to text from the iPhone....It worked!  Then it dawned on me that you cannot send text messages to a non-iPhone from a Mac.

Now you know :-)

NASA is Hiring New Astronauts

As NASA prepares to launch American astronauts this year on American rockets from American soil to the International Space Station – with an eye toward the Moon and Mars – the agency is announcing it will accept applications March 2 to 31 for the next class of Artemis Generation astronauts.

Since the 1960s, NASA has selected 350 people to train as astronaut candidates for its increasingly challenging missions to explore space. With 48 astronauts in the active astronaut corps, more will be needed to crew spacecraft bound for multiple destinations and propel exploration forward as part of Artemis missions and beyond.

“We’re celebrating our 20th year of continuous presence aboard the International Space Station in low-Earth orbit this year, and we’re on the verge of sending the first woman and next man to the Moon by 2024,” said NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine. “For the handful of highly talented women and men we will hire to join our diverse astronaut corps, it’s an incredible time in human spaceflight to be an astronaut. We’re asking all eligible Americans if they have what it to takes to apply beginning March 2.”

The basic requirements to apply include United States citizenship and a master’s degree in a STEM field, including engineering, biological science, physical science, computer science, or mathematics, from an accredited institution. The requirement for the master’s degree can also be met by:

  • Two years (36 semester hours or 54 quarter hours) of work toward a Ph.D. program in a related science, technology, engineering or math field;
  • A completed doctor of medicine or doctor of osteopathic medicine degree;
  • Completion (or current enrollment that will result in completion by June 2021) of a nationally recognized test pilot school program.

Candidates also must have at least two years of related, progressively responsible professional experience, or at least 1,000 hours of pilot-in-command time in jet aircraft. Astronaut candidates must pass the NASA long-duration spaceflight physical.

Americans may apply to #BeAnAstronaut at:

www.usajobs.gov

As part of the application process, applicants will, for the first time, be required to take an online assessment that will require up to two hours to complete.

After completing training, the new astronauts could launch on American rockets and spacecraft developed for NASA’s Commercial Crew Program to live and work aboard the International Space Station, 250 miles above Earth, where they will take part in experiments that benefit life at home and prepare us for more distant exploration.

They may also launch on NASA’s powerful new Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft, docking the spacecraft at the Gateway in lunar orbit before taking a new human landing system to the Moon’s surface. After returning humans to the Moon in 2024, NASA plans to establish sustainable lunar exploration by 2028. Gaining new experiences on and around the Moon will prepare NASA to send the first humans to Mars in the mid-2030s.

NASA expects to select the new class of astronaut candidates in mid-2021 to begin training as the next class of Artemis Generation astronauts.

For more information about a career as a NASA astronaut, and application requirements, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/astronauts

-end-

How to quickly toggle from Dark to Light Mode or visa-versa on iOS

If you're a developer or an average user, you may want to know about this neat little trick to quickly toggle from light to dark mode (or visa-versa) on the iPhone or iPad.

Here's how:

  • Bring up Control Center.
  • Look for the slider that controls the device's brightness.
  • Hold your finger on that slider until the entire slider is on the screen.
  • On the lower-left of the screen is where you can toggle light/dark mode.
  • That's it.

 

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