Man Saves Abandoned Baby Deer – (Not Safe For Sheer Cuteness)

An injured fawn was abandoned by its mother and sibling. A kind-hearted man took the baby deer into his home and saved its life.

This is pretty much the most adorable thing we have seen in a while. Enjoy! Sign up for our newsletter if you want all our articles nicely in your inbox each morning. A little news, a little futurism, a little cuteness! All “#ochen” which is slang for awesome.
This article originally appeared at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=siOh2Q0xG78.

Covering Affiliate Summit West #ASW17

It’s time for affiliates annual pilgrimage to my city.
Some of the smartest marketers and some real good friends here to network. I’ll be posting about them over the next few days.

Checking in at Affiliate Summit. Why aren’t you here? #asw17

A photo posted by Warren Whitlock (@warrenwhitlock) on

How to preorder the Nintendo Switch right now

Nintendo finally revealed all the important details about its new Switch console today, and preorders for the device are already live. If you’d like to get your hands on the $299.99 console when it launches on March 3rd, you can head over to Target or Best Buy to place an order. The Switch comes in two variations right now. One is a standard gray model, and the other is a “Neon” version with blue and red Joy-Con controllers. The company is also conducting a limited preorder run at its Nintendo World location in New York City, but online orders are probably a safer bet at this point.

As for launch games, Amazon has listings up for high-profile titles like Splatoon 2 and Super Mario Odyssey — both of which launch later this year. Only the Wii U version of the launch title The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild is available for preorder now from the online retailer. Amazon’s product page, which is supposed to have a simultaneous Switch and Wii U release on March 3rd, says it won’t be released until March 31st. So there’s some inconsistencies here, as to be expected the chaotic aftermath of such a colossal news dump.

Hopefully over the next day or the next few days, these confusing launch windows and availability hiccups are ironed out and it becomes easier to figure out when and how to get our hands on launch titles and forthcoming games. For now, however, Best Buy and Walmart are the best ways to ensure you get a Nintendo Switch console on or around launch day. Depending on when you try and place a preorder, you may have to do in-store pickup to try and snag a device on launch day, as shipping times may have been pushed back from when the initial product pages went live.

Update 11:25AM, 1/13: Preorders of the all Nintendo Switch versions have entirely sold out at Amazon, Walmart, and GameStop. You can still pick up the gray version from Best Buy or Target, but the bundle with Neon Joy-Con controllers is unavailable at those two retailers.

This article originally appeared at: http://www.theverge.com/2017/1/13/14261878/nintendo-switch-console-preorder-best-buy-walmart.

Data from wearables can predict disease

Smartwatch data can be used to detect and even predict disease, researchers say. This is good news for people betting on the potential of smartwatches to improve health beyond encouraging us to move more. If it becomes common to use this data to predict illness, we might be able to take better care of ourselves and save a lot of visits to the doctor.

Most people wear smartwatches continuously, so it generates an enormous number of metrics that can paint a fuller picture of health data than one doctor’s visit each year. For a study published today in the journal PLOS Biology Stanford University researchers gave 43 participant a Basis B1 or Basis Peak smartwatch and then analyzed nearly a year of their data. These measurements taken included heart rate, skin temperature, and sleep data. Then they analyzed the data and found that out-of-the-ordinary measurements, especially for heart rate, correlated with things like the common cold and even, in one case, Lyme disease.

In addition to the 43 participants, the researchers collected much more detailed measurements from one participant, called Participant #1, for nearly two years. (He sometimes wore up to seven wearable gadgets.) The researchers looked at his data and picked out the four dates where the measurements were out of the ordinary, with the heart rate and skin temperature especially being elevated. (Fitness trackers aren’t that great at measuring heart rate, and the Basis Peak didn’t measure up well, but the researchers said they compared the measurements to ones done in their lab at Stanford. And anyway, they were concerned with the fact that the measurement was unusual compared to normal more than if the measurement was actually accurate.)

During one period where the measurements were abnormal, he had developed Lyme disease. During the other periods, he had a fever or the common cold. All of these correlate with inflammation, so it’s likely that the data is picking up directly on signs of inflammation.

Then, the researchers picked three other people who had been ill during the period that they used Basis watches. For them, too, their heart rate and skin temperatures were elevated during periods of sickness. Using this data, they wore a software program to actually predict which measurements suggest that someone was about to become ill.

In a separate experiment, the team measured the insulin resistance of 20 people, and found that there was a relationship between insulin resistance, body mass index, and heart rate, the last of which was tacked by a smartwatch. Diabetes, then, is another disease that could potentially be predicted by data from wearables.

The authors hope that it’ll become more common to use data from wearables to detect illness. It is possible that this will lead to false alarms, they note, and that there are potential problems with patient privacy. But if this becomes widespread, it could be a convenient diagnosis tool, especially for people who are low-income or live in rural areas or have a hard time getting to the doctor for a routine check-up.

This article originally appeared at: http://www.theverge.com/2017/1/12/14251438/data-smartwatch-predict-health-wearables-illness.