Hisense South Africa fait don d’un échographe HD60 au Peninsular Maternity Trust pour la maternité de Mowbray

LE CAP, Afrique du Sud, le 6 août 2022 /PRNewswire/ — À l’occasion d’une cérémonie de donation le 28 juillet, Hisense, fabricant et fournisseur d’appareils électroniques et médicaux à haute performance, a offert un appareil d’échographie haute résolution de pointe, l’échographe Hisense HD60, au Peninsula Maternity Trust pour la maternité de Mowbray pour annoncer sa collaboration et sa contribution à la maternité de Mowbray et au département de la santé du Cap-Occidental.

La maternité de Mowbray, située au Cap, est la plus grande maternité d’Afrique du Sud spécialisée dans les soins aux femmes présentant des grossesses à haut risque. Le professeur Ntusi, qui est président et médecin-chef à l’université du Cap (UCT) et au Groote Schuur Hospital, a gravi le Kilimandjaro en décembre dernier pour recueillir des fonds afin d’acheter un nouvel échographe pour le service d’anesthésie de l’hôpital.

Hisense South Africa a fait don d’un échographe HD60 en réponse aux efforts du Professeur Ntusi.  La réception de cet appareil d’échographie de pointe doté de capacités de diagnostic améliorées fonctionnant grâce à l’IA intégrée relèvera le niveau de soins de la maternité de Mowbray et offrira de meilleures chances aux femmes à risque tout en stimulant le moral du personnel.

« Nous sommes très fiers de pouvoir faire don de cette machine à la maternité de Mowbray et au département de la santé du Cap-Occidental ; nous espérons et souhaitons que cela changera la vie des communautés environnantes en améliorant les capacités technologiques et médicales de l’hôpital tout en offrant aux professionnels de santé une innovation technologique de qualité et un soutien qui facilitera un peu leur vie professionnelle », a déclaré Ronele Prince,  responsable des ventes médicales chez Hisense.

Hisense a conçu l’échographe HD60 pour offrir aux médecins une imagerie plus claire et à plus haute résolution affichée sur son écran de diagnostic 21,4″.  L’appareil est livré avec une variété de sondes échographiques, ce qui le rend bien adapté pour répondre à plusieurs besoins de l’hôpital en matière d’anesthésie, d’obstétrique, de gynécologie et d’interventions cardiovasculaires.

L’échographe Hisense HD60 a été utilisé dans plus de 30 hôpitaux à travers la Chine, aidant à diagnostiquer plus de 50 000 cas. Pour son échographe HD60, Hisense a obtenu le marquage CE pour les dispositifs médicaux en décembre 2021 et la licence SAHPRA en Afrique du Sud en janvier 2022.  En avril de cette année, Hisense a obtenu sa première commande de six échographes HD60 en Afrique du Sud, une étape importante pour devenir une marque de renommée internationale dans l’industrie de l’équipement médical.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1872546/image_5020023_41497144.jpg

Milk Use and Lactose Tolerance Didn’t Develop Hand in Hand in Europe

Early Europeans drank milk for thousands of years before they evolved the ability to fully digest it as adults, scientists say.

New results published in the journal Nature suggest that being able to digest the lactose in milk wasn’t usually much of an advantage for ancient people in Europe. Instead, the new study suggests that famine and disease made lactose intolerance deadly.

The new discovery challenges the long-standing assumption that dairy farming spread through ancient populations alongside the genetic quirks that prevent adults from losing the ability to digest lactose.

Like other young mammals, human children produce an enzyme called lactase that breaks down lactose. The gene for lactase usually turns off in adulthood because aside from humans, adult mammals don’t drink milk.

Without lactase, lactose from milk ends up feeding gut microbes that produce gas, which can cause uncomfortable digestive problems.

“You’ll get some cramps. You’ll get some diarrhea. Might fart a bit more. It might be unpleasant for you,” said geneticist Mark Thomas of University College London, who led the genetics work for the new study. “It might be embarrassing, but you’re not going to die.”

But when our ancient ancestors suffered through plagues or famines, getting diarrhea from drinking milk was probably more than just uncomfortable, the authors suggest.

“Then we’re talking about a life-threatening condition,” Thomas said.

About one-third of people alive today have a genetic variant that keeps their lactase gene from turning off. This trait has evolved independently multiple times in the ancestors of people now living in parts of Africa, the Middle East, South Asia and Europe.

Scientists long assumed that lactase persistence evolved alongside the spread of dairy farming, which happened over a few thousand years beginning around 7000 BC.

However, earlier studies revealed that lactase persistence was vanishingly rare in Europe until about 3,000 years ago. But after that, it took only a few thousand years for the trait to become widespread — the blink of an eye in evolutionary time.

Why this trait would evolve so quickly was a mystery.

“Lactase persistence has been under enormous amounts of natural selection over the last eight to ten thousand years … more than any other part of the genome in Europeans,” said Thomas. “It was, for a very long period of time, the one trait upon which life and death pivoted more than any other. … It’s insane. It just defies explanation.”

Searching for an explanation, the authors sought to reconstruct the history of milk use in the region over the past 9,000 years. They examined fat residues left on more than 7,000 pottery shards collected at 550 archaeological sites across Europe.

“When people were cooking … fat liquefies and then penetrates into the pores of the pottery,” said organic geochemist and study co-author Mélanie Roffet-Salque of the University of Bristol. “It’s quite stunning, really. But thousands of years later when archaeologists excavate a piece of pottery that had been discarded and then we analyze the pottery, it’s still there.”

The pottery shards showed that milk consumption was widespread across most of Europe for thousands of years before most Europeans became lactose tolerant.

Studying health data on modern Britons, the researchers didn’t find any evidence that drinking milk hurts the health of modern adults who don’t produce lactase.

Surprisingly, using data on ancient population fluctuations to approximate when and where ancient Europeans dealt with famine and disease, the researchers found that sickness and hunger might explain the evolution of lactase persistence better than milk consumption.

Famine could have forced ancient people to drink more milk than usual as other food sources ran out. And both malnutrition and disease could have made lactose-induced diarrhea very dangerous. Severe diarrhea can kill — it is still the second leading cause of death for children under 5 worldwide.

Shevan Wilkin, a biomolecular archaeologist at the University of Zurich who reviewed the new paper, said the research was an important step forward but that she’s not necessarily convinced that famine and disease alone can explain the evolution of lactase persistence.

“The reason I don’t know if I think they’re right, I also don’t know if I think they’re wrong, is before 2,000 years ago, there were absolutely times of famine,” Wilkin said.

Thomas said he’d like to see similar studies done in Africa, where lactase persistence evolved independently three different times. Wilkin agreed, noting that Europe is over-studied, and that future research should focus on other regions, including central Asia, where people drink lots of milk despite lacking a genetic variant that keeps lactase from turning off in adults.

“I think it’d be really interesting to apply this [in] multiple places,” said Wilkin. “It’s just such a cool and ambitious undertaking, and I think it’s really going to spur a ton of new studies.”

Source: Voice of America

Chinese Tourist Hot Spot Sanya Imposes COVID-19 Lockdown

The southern Chinese resort city of Sanya imposed a lockdown on Saturday and restricted transport links to try to stem a COVID-19 outbreak that comes as some 80,000 visitors were enjoying its beaches at peak season.

The curbs came into force at 6 a.m. (2200 GMT) after authorities said the COVID-19 situation was “very severe” and people’s movements were being restricted.

Authorities did not say when the measures might be lifted but said tourists wanting to leave the city, which is on Hainan island, would have to show five negative PCR tests over seven days.

“We urge the general public and tourists to understand and give their support,” authorities said in a statement on the city government’s WeChat account.

The city reported 263 COVID-19 cases for Friday, up from 11 two days earlier. Authorities said they had detected the omicron subvariant BA.5.1.3.

The lockdown comes in the high tourist season for the city, which is also known for its duty-free shopping and is home to several high-end hotels run by international companies including IHG and Marriott International.

The deputy mayor, He Shigang, told state broadcaster CCTV there were about 80,000 tourists in the city but that the cases were mainly among residents.

Officials told a news conference later on Saturday that tourists would get hotels at half price if they had to extend their stays.

“It really sucks,” said Micah Hostetter, a business consultant based in Shanghai who was scheduled to leave on Sunday after a weeklong stay.

“We don’t know how long we’re going to be here, we hope it’s not that long,” said Hostetter, who endured nearly two-and-half months of lockdown in Shanghai earlier in the year.

The sale of railway tickets out of Sanya was suspended, CCTV reported, citing the national operator, and more than 80% of flights to and from Sanya had been canceled, according to data provider Variflight.

The city started imposing lockdown measures in some places on Thursday. More venues, including its duty-free malls which are popular with Chinese shoppers unable to travel abroad, were shut on Friday.

Source: Voice of America

Automobili Lamborghini’s NFT journey continues countdown to the eight-month “The Epic Road Trip” program releasing new Lamborghini NFTs to collect

New York, NY, Aug. 05, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Following its two successful NFT projects to date, Automobili Lamborghini, in collaboration with NFT PRO™ and INVNT.ATOM™, has commenced a virtual journey that starts from the Moon, crosses Space and continues in iconic locations across the world.

In this new adventure, Lamborghini super sports cars will be the unmissable protagonists of places that the traveler can visit and discover, collecting new NFTs every month for eight months until March 2023. The collection consists of four NFTs released each month for 4 days consecutively and will be available to purchase for 24 hours only. The fourth NFT will be available in a limited edition of just 63 units. At the very end of the campaign, only those who have acquired all the monthly NFTs issued – either the three regular NFTs or three regular plus the limited edition – will receive a special NFT.

To reward loyalty during the campaign, other exclusive surprises will be communicated, including a digital artwork by the Lamborghini Centro Stile produced for “The Epic Road Trip” campaign, for those who purchase two complete monthly collections. For those who have completed the first four months acquisitions there will be the opportunity to participate in a special tour of the Sant’Agata Bolognese’s Headquarters.

“Since 1963, the year of its foundation, Automobili Lamborghini has always led from the front, demonstrating this with its super sports cars that continue to be the protagonists in dreams of children and adults all over the world. Entering the virtual world of modern collecting with NFTs is the natural translation and evolution of that dream,” said Christian Mastro, Marketing Director of Automobili Lamborghini. “NFTs are the new, unconventional and exclusive proposition, paving the way for a new form of expression for the younger generations.”

“Lamborghini loyalists and cryptocurrency fans will be amazed by this next series of drops that culminate in a very special reveal next March,” said Christian Ferri, CEO of NFT PRO™, Lamborghini’s launch partner and expert in engagement with consumers of Web3. “We are thrilled to continue our partnership with Lamborghini by offering this truly exclusive NFT collection.”

INVNT.ATOM the global digital innovation division of [INVNT GROUP]™; led the creative, strategy, design, content, and marketing communications.

“Our previous collaboration with Lamborghini – auctioning off a 1:1 NFT attached to the last physical Aventador Coupé super sportscar – was a testament to how impactful storytelling at the digital frontier cultivates community and consumer engagement. We’re honored to grow our relationship with Lamborghini and to be partnering with NFT PRO to celebrate innovation and Lamborghini’s 1963 heritage,” said Scott Cullather, President, and CEO of [INVNT GROUP].

The first series of four NFTs will be released starting from 8 August 2022 on the website nft.lamborghini.com.

Photos and videos: media.lamborghini.com

Information on Automobili Lamborghini: www.lamborghini.com

Media Kit: (High res imagery & bios).

About INVNT.ATOM™

INVNT.ATOM, part of [INVNT GROUP] THE GLOBAL BRANDSTORY PROJECT™, is an innovation and brand experience agency devoted to helping global brands chart a course, navigate, activate, and create new opportunities at the digital frontier of Web3. Based in Singapore, the collective of strategists, marketers, creators, programmers, matchmakers, and thought leaders, turn strategies into stories and stories into experiences, that engage communities on the global stage. For more information about INVNT.ATOM, visit: www.invntatom.com

About [INVNT GROUP]™

[INVNT GROUP] was established as an evolution of the founding global live brand storytelling agency INVNT. Led by President and CEO, Scott Cullather, [INVNT GROUP], THE GLOBAL BRANDSTORY PROJECT™ represents a portfolio of disciplines designed to help forward-thinking organizations innovate and impact audiences everywhere. The GROUP consists of modern brand strategy firm, Folk Hero; creative-led culture consultancy, Meaning; production studio & creative agency, HEVĒ; events for colleges and universities, INVNT Higher Ed; digital innovation division, INVNT.ATOM; creative multimedia studio, Hypnogram; and the original live brand storytelling agency, INVNT. For more information about INVNT.ATOM, visit: www.invntgroup.com

About NFT PRO™

NFT PRO is a white -label NFT solution for enterprises, helping brands strategize, create, and sell NFT’s to customers, fans, and collectors. Their proprietary methodology and software take the guesswork from setting up and executing an NFT strategy and ensure consistent results and brand safety for every campaign. NFT PRO simplifies creating and executing NFT campaigns that are both effective and on-brand. For more information about NFT PRO, visit: www.web3pro.com

Attachment

For “The Epic Road Trip” campaign & press enquiries:
Paola Cracknell
pcracknell@invnt.com

For [INVNT GROUP] and INVNT.ATOM press enquiries:
Jhonathan Mendez de Leon
jmendezdeleon@invnt.com

For NFT Pro press enquiries:
Devashish “Dev” Sarkar
devashishs@nftpro.com

Hisense South Africa Donates an Ultrasound HD60 to The Peninsular Maternity Trust for Mowbray Maternity Hospital

CAPE TOWN, South Africa, Aug. 5, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — At a donation ceremony on July 28, Hisense, a manufacturer and provider of high-performance electronics and medical devices, delivered a cutting-edge, high-resolution, ultrasound machine, the Hisense Ultrasound HD60, to the Peninsula Maternity Trust for Mowbray Maternity Hospital to announce the collaboration and contribution to the Mowbray Maternity  Hospital and The Western Cape Department of Health.

The Mowbray Maternity Hospital, located in Cape Town, is the largest dedicated maternity hospital in South Africa specialising in providing care to women with high-risk pregnancies. Professor Ntusi, who is the chair and head of medicine at the University of Cape Town (UCT) and Groote Schuur Hospital climbed Mount Kilimanjaro last December to raise money to buy a new ultrasound machine for the hospital’s anaesthesia department.

Hisense South Africa donated an Ultrasound HD60 in response to Prof Ntusi’s efforts. Receiving this advanced ultrasound device with enhanced diagnostics powered by built-in AI will raise the level of care at the Mowbray Maternity Hospital and deliver better outcomes for at-risk women as well as boost staff morale.

“We are so proud to be able to donate this machine to the Mowbray Maternity Hospital and the Western Cape  Department of Health, we hope and wish this will not only change the lives of the surrounding community by improving the technological and medical capacity of the hospital, but also provide the health care professionals with quality technology innovation and support in order to make their work lives a little bit easier ” Ronele Prince, medical sales manager of Hisense said.

Hisense developed the Ultrasound HD60 to provide clinicians with clearer, higher resolution imaging shown on its 21.4″ diagnostic display. The device comes with a variety of ultrasound probes, making it well-suited to meet a range of the hospital’s anaesthetic, obstetric, gynaecological, and cardiovascular procedure needs.

The Hisense Ultrasound HD60 has been used in more than 30 hospitals across China, helping diagnose over 50,000 cases. Hisense completed the CE MDR certification for the Ultrasound HD60 in December 2021 and obtained the SAHPRA license in South Africa for the device in January 2022. In April this year, Hisense won its first  order of six Ultrasound HD60 in South Africa; a significant step to becoming an internationally well-known brand in the medical equipment industry.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1872546/image_5020023_41497144.jpg

Synchronoss propulse le lancement par Telkomsigma de deux nouvelles solutions cloud personnelles haut de gamme en Indonésie

Les étudiants universitaires entrants dans toute l’Indonésie recevront un compte cloud personnel Floudrive gratuit ; un compte Premium Floudrive sera également disponible pour 170 millions de clients mobiles de Telkomsel

BRIDGEWATER, New Jersey, 05 août 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Synchronoss Technologies, Inc. (« Synchronoss » ou la « Société ») (Nasdaq : SNCR), un leader mondial et innovateur en matière de produits et plateformes numériques, de messagerie et de cloud, a annoncé aujourd’hui le déploiement officiel de deux nouvelles solutions cloud personnel haut de gamme proposées par Telkomsigma, filiale de Telkom Indonesia, le plus grand opérateur de télécommunications du pays. Suite à cet accord en novembre, Telkomsigma met désormais son service Floudrive, optimisé par Synchronoss Personal Cloud, à la disposition des étudiants universitaires et des clients mobiles de Telkomsel.

En tant que branche des services informatiques et des centres de données de Telkomsel, Telkomsigma utilise la plateforme Synchronoss Personal Cloud pour son service Floudrive, offrant une expérience de stockage dans le cloud fiable et intuitive avec la possibilité de sauvegarder et de restaurer le contenu numérique, y compris les photos, vidéos, textes et autres fichiers. Pour garantir la conformité avec les lois indonésiennes relatives au stockage des données, Synchronoss s’est associée à Alibaba, tirant parti de son infrastructure informatique dans le pays.

À partir de septembre, Telkomsigma offrira aux étudiants universitaires un compte gratuit Floudrive comprenant 50 gigaoctets de stockage cloud, qu’ils pourront utiliser pour sauvegarder tout contenu numérique et partager des fichiers et des photos. La formule gratuite est la première de son genre et est proposée par l’intermédiaire d’universités sélectionnées en Indonésie. En outre, Telkomsigma proposera une version haut de gamme de Floudrive à 170 millions de clients mobiles de Telkomsel. Le service haut de gamme comprendra 100 gigaoctets de stockage.

« Nous sommes ravis de déployer ces deux nouvelles solutions de cloud personnel haut de gamme qui tirent parti de la plateforme Synchronoss Personal Cloud, en particulier au sein des universités, ce qui est une première dans le secteur », a déclaré Tanto Suratno, directeur des affaires et des ventes chez Telkomsigma. « La combinaison de Synchronoss et d’Alibaba nous permettra de suivre le rythme des millions d’abonnés qui profiteront de nos services gratuits et haut de gamme de Floudrive. »

« Telkomsigma, Telkomsel et Telkom Indonesia comprennent l’opportunité unique du marché de fournir des solutions cloud personnel qui fourniront une large gamme de services numériques aux abonnés dans toute l’Indonésie », a commenté Patrick Doran, directeur technologique de Synchronoss.« Sachant que la souveraineté des données locales est une exigence essentielle pour les clients, nous avons certifié notre plateforme technologique sur la plateforme Alibaba Cloud, fournissant une solution de cloud personnel en marque blanche qui est sécurisée, fiable, évolutive et spécifique au pays. »

Les principaux fournisseurs de services de premier niveau utilisent Synchronoss Personal Cloud, Synchronoss Email Suite, ou les deux pour gérer plus de 250 millions d’abonnés dans le monde entier, stockant et gérant plus de 142 pétaoctets de données.

À propos de Synchronoss
Synchronoss Technologies (Nasdaq : SNCR) est un développeur de logiciels permettant aux entreprises du monde entier de se connecter à leurs abonnés de manière fiable et pertinente. Sa gamme de produits contribue à rationaliser les réseaux, simplifier l’intégration et interagir avec les abonnés afin de créer de nouvelles sources de revenus, de réduire les coûts et d’accélérer la mise sur le marché. Plusieurs centaines de millions d’abonnés font confiance à Synchronoss pour rester en phase avec les individus, les services et les contenus qu’ils aiment. Pour en savoir plus, rendez-vous sur www.synchronoss.com.

Contact pour les relations avec les médias :
Domenick Cilea
Springboard
dcilea@springboardpr.com

Contact pour les relations avec les investisseurs :
Matt Glover/Tom Colton
Gateway Group, Inc.
SNCR@gatewayir.com