Guide Sensmart présente sa dernière innovation, la caméra thermique à clip, au salon ADIHEX 2022

WUHAN, Chine, 1er octobre 2022/PRNewswire/ — ADIHX, le plus grand salon de la chasse, de l’équitation et de la préservation du patrimoine au Moyen-Orient et en Afrique, bat son plein au Centre national des expositions d’Abou Dabi. Guide Sensmart, le principal fabricant de caméras thermiques, marque son apparition dans le Hall 11 en tant qu’excellent producteur de caméras thermiques hautes performances.

Guide Sensmart Booth in Hall 11

À l’occasion de la 19e édition de l’événement, Guide Sensmart présente sa gamme de produits aux amateurs de chasse. Il s’agit des monoculaires d’imagerie thermique Guide TK Gen2 et TD, des jumelles d’imagerie thermique de la série TN, des lunettes thermiques TS et TU, et de la dernière innovation, l’accessoire à clip pour la caméra thermique de la série TA Gen2 Aquila. Les séries TK Gen2 et TD sont optimales pour répondre aux différents besoins des chasseurs, des explorateurs de la nature et des professionnels. La série TN est l’outil idéal pour les chasseurs, les observateurs de la faune et les professionnels de la recherche et du sauvetage. Les lunettes TS et le TU sont indispensables pour un chasseur qui recherche l’efficacité et la précision ultimes. La nouvelle série TA conviendra parfaitement aux chasseurs.

Guide TA Gen2 Aquila Series Thermal Imaging Clip-on Attachment

La fixation de la lunette thermique TA Gen2 transforme une optique de jour en un dispositif thermique complet. Elle offre des capacités de visée supérieures et une excellente acquisition de cible en utilisant les technologies d’imagerie à signature thermique pour aider les utilisateurs à acquérir et à localiser des cibles dans des conditions de faible luminosité ou de nuit. Ses détecteurs d’imagerie thermique améliorés de 17 μm et 12 µm avec des résolutions de 400 x 300 et 640 x 480 pixels respectivement fournissent une image exceptionnellement nette et une excellente sensibilité thermique dans toutes les conditions difficiles. Les doubles algorithmes, le TDE-Tech et le PureIR, augmentent la clarté de l’imagerie et le détail global de l’image, apportant un champ de vision plus net et plus détaillé, ainsi que de meilleures capacités d’identification des objets. La batterie standard 18650 assure une puissance suffisante pour 7 heures de fonctionnement, et le remplacement simple et rapide de la batterie permet une observation continue sans interruption. Les trois modes de scène et les six palettes de couleurs permettent aux utilisateurs d’observer leur champ de vision plus efficacement et d’adapter l’appareil aux situations d’observation changeantes.

Hormis l’ADIHX, la Coupe du Monde de la FIFA 2022 devrait débuter au Qatar en novembre. Attendons avec impatience ce tournoi.

À propos de Guide Sensmart

Guide Sensmart est une filiale de Guide Infrared (SZ.002414), le leader mondial des systèmes d’imagerie thermique infrarouge avec plus de 20 ans d’expérience dans l’industrie infrarouge et une capacité de production de masse. Pour en savoir plus, visitez le site  https://www.guideir.com/ .

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UN Calls for End to Discrimination Against Elderly

The United Nations is calling for an end to discrimination against older people and for recognition of their contributions to society, as it marks the International Day of Older Persons Saturday.

With 1.4 billion people estimated to have reached at least 60 years old by 2030, U.N. officials say that is too many people to ignore and dismiss as inconsequential, especially as older people still make many significant contributions.

At 73, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres demonstrates that. In celebration of the day, he commended the accomplishments of older people, whom he called a valuable source of knowledge and experience.

He also praised the resilience of the more than 1 billion older people in facing adversity in a rapidly changing world.

“The past years have witnessed dramatic upheavals and older people often found themselves at the epicenter of crises,” Guterres said. “They are particularly vulnerable to a range of challenges, including the COVID-19 pandemic, the worsening climate crisis, proliferating conflicts, and growing poverty. Yet in the face of these threats, older people have inspired us with their remarkable resilience.”

The World Health Organization says longer life brings opportunities to pursue new activities, such as further education or a new career, depending on a person’s health.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus called it important for countries to work together to foster healthy aging — an effort that must include older people themselves.

“A collaboration to improve the lives of older people, their families, and their communities,” said Tedros. “In practice that means keeping alert for ageism and supporting older people by engaging them in the community, providing responsive health care, and quality long-term care for those who need it.”

The U.N. says it is important to challenge negative characterizations and misconceptions about the elderly. It calls for an end to age and gender discrimination and for communities to create opportunities for older people who live in them.

Source: Voice of America

Uganda Seeks Ebola Funding Amid Exposure of 65 Health Workers

The World Health Organization and Ugandan authorities are seeking nearly $18 million to help contain the Ebola outbreak in the country for the next three months. The initiative comes as Uganda registers the death of the first health worker in the current Ebola outbreak and brings the total number of confirmed cases to 35, with seven deaths.

The death of the first medical worker during the current outbreak was revealed by Dr. Jane Ruth Aceng, Uganda’s minister for health, as she spoke to the media after a high-level closed-door meeting organized by the WHO in Kampala

On Thursday, the ministry announced that six health workers had been confirmed to have the Ebola Sudan strain and two more were in critical condition.

The health worker who died, a Tanzanian national, was moved to an isolation facility at a hospital in the neighboring district of Fort Portal in the Mubende district, where he had handled the first Ebola case.

Because of what Aceng called some mistakes, more health workers have been exposed to Ebola.

“Today, we have 35 confirmed cases. And we have lost seven people, unfortunately. And one of them is a medical doctor,” Aceng said. “It is true that we have 65 health workers who have been exposed. Now all these 65 health workers are under quarantine.”

The current Ebola Sudan strain so far has affected four districts in Uganda, including Mubende, with the epicenter in Madudu sub county, Kyegwegwa, Kassanda and now the Kagadi district.

Aceng revealed the main commonality with the four affected districts.

“People from Madudu run to these districts because they thought there was witchcraft in Madudu,” she said. “And they were running away either to find a safe haven or to reach out to relatives to help them … treat what to them was a strange disease that they did not understand. However, with the various interventions that we have had, the people of Madudu have now understood that it is Ebola and not witchcraft.”

Regardless of what course the spread of the Ebola Sudan strain will take, there is still no vaccine. Health officials in Uganda, including those from the WHO, are mobilizing and seeking the funds to control the outbreak.

Dr. Yonas Tegegn Woldermariam, the WHO representative to Uganda, said he is worried the money being sought might not cover all costs.

“If we go into the preparedness, we are talking, even for the three months, three times or four times that amount,” he said. “Plus, there are things which we take for granted, assuming the system will provide them. Those are additional costs like transportation, like fuel, like human resources, which we have to consider to also fund as we go ahead.”

The Sudan Ebola virus is less common than the Zaire Ebola virus, and there is currently no effective vaccine. The Sudan Ebola virus was first reported in southern Sudan in 1976. Although several outbreaks have been reported since then in both Uganda and Sudan, the deadliest outbreak in Uganda was in 2000, claiming more than 200 lives.

Uganda’s last Ebola outbreak, in 2019, was confirmed to be the Zaire ebolavirus. It last reported a Sudan ebolavirus outbreak in 2012.

Source: Voice of America