Future Chat: Tech 18 – Sports Tech

Future Chat
Future Chat
Future Chat: Tech 18 - Sports Tech
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This week on Future Tech Chat, we will be taking it to the pitch, as we discuss the world of sports and all the technology used in professional and amateur sports alike.

Starting with slow motion cameras, going all the way through the FoxTrax puck to the goal-line system used in the World Cup going on right at this moment. We will take a look into the possibility of future technological upgrades to your favourite sports, and I’m sure we’ll also get into wishful thinking about tech advances in our favourite sports.

I hope you’ll tune in live at 12:30 PM EDT on Saturday, July 12th for the episode, and you’ll be able to watch it in full above live or after it’s aired.

You can direct any questions you might have to the Q&A on the event page (https://plus.google.com/events/c8idnr8qeghbvialb9ll82gnlms), or on Facebook, Twitter and Google+. We look forward to seeing you here live!

Ottawhat 7 – Peter Grant Mackechnie

Ottawhat
Ottawhat
Ottawhat 7 - Peter Grant Mackechnie
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Our guest this week was Peter Grant Mackechnie, an Ottawa musician who moved to “The Big Smoke”.

Check out this week’s episode as we discuss musicals, classical piano, living in Toronto, and spirit animals. Let us know your demon on Twitter @ottawhatpodcast or in a comment below!

Links:
The “Witty” Traveller – Railway City Brewing Company – St. Thomas, ON

 

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Categorized as Ottawhat

Future Chat: Science 3 – Vaccinations

Future Chat
Future Chat
Future Chat: Science 3 - Vaccinations
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Outbreaks in North America of measles (red), mumps (brown), and whooping cough (bright green). Source (retrieved 2014-07-02).

So, The handsome gentlemen co-host of Future Chat and future new-media baron Rob Attrell has asked me to write a brief summary on vaccinations in preparation for Future Sci Chat #3.  I told him I’d do what I can, and you may see the results below.  For those of you wishing to read the post I wrote in 2011 on the very same topic, have a link.

So what’s a vaccination?

They’re a good thing.  A vaccination is often an injected dose of a live, or sometimes dead virus.  The virus has either been sterilised (no reproduction means no infection) or treated in such a way that it will not be able to harm the patient.  The body then produces the antibodies required to fight off the virus, which are then able to fight off or otherwise discourage a future infection of the same virus.  It is not uncommon for the patient to experience symptoms similar to viral infection such as elevated temperature, fatigue, and/or soreness because the body earnestly believes it is fighting off an infection.

Sounds unpleasant, why bother?

Short answer?  Because people die.  Significant investment was made by North Americans in the mid-twentieth century to cure things like polio, smallpox, measles, mumps, rubella, and whooping cough because those diseases cost lives.  Further, when governments are on the hook for health care costs (as is the case for the Canadian provinces), vaccinating the citizenry is a lot easier than dealing with hoards of sick and potentially dying people.  This is compounded by the fact that diseases can spread through hospitals, which is why health care professionals are the first to be vaccinated.


So what’s the catch?

You have to deal with a needle and the associated symptoms for a day or two.  There are some instances in which people have had adverse reactions to vaccinations, but this is usually due to an allergy to one of the ingredients (or often a preservative agent), or due to a pre-existing complication.  Healthy people are not normally in jeopardy.


Doesn’t the MMR (Measles-Mumps-Rubella) vaccine cause autism?

No.

But Jenny McCarthy said –

Jenny McCarthy isn’t a doctor, nor is she in any way trained to formally review or interpret the relevant literature.  The medical journal The Lancet published a since-[thoroughly]-discredited paper suggesting a causal link between the MMR vaccine and onset of childhood autism.  Recent research has indicated that autism develops while the baby is still in the womb, and therefore cannot be caused by vaccinations.

What if I don’t vaccinate my child(ren), aren’t they safe because all the other kids get vaccinated?

Ah, I see you’ve heard of “herd immunity.”  See that map at the top of the page?  That’s what those parents thought, too.

NM

You will be able to watch Future Sci Chat episode #3, on Vaccines, live at 12:30 PM EDT on Saturday, July 5th, either here below, or by clicking on the link that is this sentence.