Screens are killing your eyeballs, and now we know how

https://www.popsci.com/screens-killing-eyes-blue-light?dom=rss-default&src=syn


Blue light’s rap sheet is growing ever longer. Researchers have connected the high-energy visible light, which emanates from both the sun and your cell phone (and just about every other digital device in our hands and on our bedside tables), to disruptions in the body’s circadian rhythms. And physicians have drawn attention to the relationship between our favorite devices and eye problems, ranging from everyday eye strain to glaucoma to macular degeneration.

Humans can see a thin spectrum of light, ranging from red to violet. Shorter wavelengths appear blue, while the longer ones appear red. What appears as white light, whether it’s from sunlight or screen time, actually includes almost every color in the spectrum. In a recent paper published in the journal Scientific Reports, researchers at the University of Toledo have begun to parse the process by which close or prolonged exposure to the 445 nanometer shortwave called “blue light” can trigger damage irreversible damage in eye cells. The results could have profound consequences for consumer technology.

“Photoreceptors are like the vehicle. Retinal is the gas,” says study author and chemistry professor Ajith Karunarathne. In the lab, when cells from the eye were exposed to blue light directly—in theory, mimicking what happens when we stare at our phone or computer screens—the high-intensity waves trigger a chemical reaction in the retinal molecules in the eye. The blue light causes the retinal to oxidize, creating “toxic chemical species,” according to Karunarathne. The retinal, energized by this particular band of light, kills the photoreceptor cells, which do not grow back once they are damaged. If retinal is the gas, Karunarathne says, then blue light is a dangerous spark.

Catastrophic damage to your vision is hardly guaranteed. But the experiment shows that blue light can kill photoreceptor cells. Murdering enough of them can lead to macular degeneration, an incurable disease that blurs or even eliminates vision.

Blue light occurs naturally in sunlight, which also contains other forms of visible light and ultraviolet and infrared rays. But, Karunarathne points out, we don’t spend that much time staring at the sun. As kids, most of us were taught it would fry our eyes. Digital devices, however, pose a bigger threat. The average American spends almost 11 hours a day in front of some type of screen, according to a 2016 Nielsen poll. Right now, reading this, you’re probably mainlining blue light.

When we stare straight at our screens—especially in the dark—we channel the light into a very small area inside our eyeball. “That can actually intensify the light emitted from the device many many fold,” Karunarathne says. “When you take a magnifying glass and hold it to the sun, you can see how intense the light at the focal point gets. You can burn something.”

Some user experience designers have been criticizing our reliance on blue light, including Amber Case, author of the book Calm Technology. On her Medium blog she documented the way blue light has become “the color of the future,” thanks in part to films like 1982’s Blade Runner. The environmentally-motivated switch from incandescent light bulbs to high-efficiency (and high-wattage) LED bulbs further pushed us into blue light’s path. But, Case writes, “[i]f pop culture has helped lead us into a blue-lit reality that’s hurting us so much, it can help lead us toward a new design aesthetic bathed in orange.”

The military, she notes, still uses red or orange light for many of its interfaces, including those in control rooms and cockpits. “They’re low-impact colors that are great for nighttime shifts,” she writes. They also eliminate blue light-induced “visual artifacts”—the sensation of being blinded by a bright screen in the dark—that often accompany blue light and can be hazardous in some scenarios.

Apple offers a “night shift” setting on its phones, which allow users to blot out the blue and filter their screens through a sunset hue. Aftermarket products designed to control the influx of blue light into our irises are also available, including desktop screen protectors. There are even blue light-filtering sunglasses marketed to specifically to gamers. But as the damage done by blue light becomes clearer—just as our vision is getting blurrier—consumers may demand bigger changes.

Going forward, Karunarathne plans to stay in data-collection mode. “This is a new trend of looking at our devices,” he says. “It will take some time to see if and how much damage these devices can cause over time. When this new generation gets older, the question is, by that time, is the damage done?” But now that he appears to have identified a biochemical pathway for blue light damage, he’s also looking for new interventions. “Who knows. One day we might be able to develop eye drops, that if you know you are going to be exposed to intense light, you could use some of those… to reduce damage.”

via Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now https://ift.tt/2k2uJQn

August 10, 2018 at 01:55PM

Speedier broadband standards? Pai’s FCC says 25Mbps is fast enough

https://arstechnica.com/?p=1357351


The Federal Communications Commission is proposing to maintain the US broadband standard at the current level of 25Mbps downstream and 3Mbps upstream.

That’s the speed standard the FCC uses each year to determine whether advanced telecommunications capabilities are “being deployed to all Americans in a reasonable and timely fashion.”

The FCC raised the standard from 4Mbps/1Mbps to 25Mbps/3Mbps in January 2015 under then-Chairman Tom Wheeler. Ajit Pai, who was then a commissioner in the FCC’s Republican minority, voted against raising the speed standard.

As FCC chairman since 2017, Pai has kept the standard at 25Mbps/3Mbps despite calls to raise it from Democratic Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel. This week, he proposed keeping the standard the same for another year.

via Ars Technica https://arstechnica.com

August 10, 2018 at 02:42PM

Acer Spins-Off Gaming Peripherals & Smart Devices Into Premium Accesories Brand

https://www.anandtech.com/show/13203/acer-accessories-spin-off-gadget-technology-unc

Acer this week announced plans to spin off its gaming accessories and smart devices businesses into a new subsidiary. The new entity, tentatively called Gadget Technology Inc, will focus on various premium gadgets, including those for gamers as well as for emerging segments of the market. The wholly owned subsidiary will formally start operations in mid-September.

Acer’s Gadget Technology will focus on market segments with “higher profit margins," covering a wide bredth of products. Initially, Gadget Technology will have two lineups of products: the first one will include premium PC gaming mice, keyboards, headphones, chairs and cases. The second one will comprise of smart devices, including air quality monitors, according to a report from the Taipei Times that cites the company’s officials.

Acer has been producing Predator-branded gaming desktops, laptops, and displays for a number of years now. To make the PCs more appealing to gamers, the company bundled various peripherals with the products, such as premium mice that featured similar design elements as the rest of the Predator series. In addition, the company offers Predator-branded keyboards, mice, headsets, bags, and mousepads separately. Furthermore, Acer has a broad lineup of wearables, smart cameras, accessories, and a number of other emerging categories.

It is unclear whether Gadget Technology will simply absorb Predator-branded peripherals as well as existing smart devices from Acer, or will just inherit IP and development teams from the parent company. On a high level, gaming peripherals from Gadget Technology are supposed to compete against dedicated gaming brands and to do so successfully the new subsidiary will need to radically expand the number of offerings. The situations seems a bit different with the “smart devices” part of the business, but normally if you want to compete for, say, smart home, you need to offer more than one product.

Having two (and potentially more) very diverse lineups of products under one roof is a bit odd. The spin off decision enables Acer to focus on PCs, but Gadget Technology will have to balance its resources while developing products because it will barely have any synergy between different design teams.

Acer’s Gadget Technology will start operations on September 14. The company will receive NT$75.66 million ($2.467 million) in assets and NT$30.66 million (~$1 million) in liabilities.

Related Reading:

Sources: Taipei Times, TSE MOPS

via AnandTech https://ift.tt/phao0v

August 10, 2018 at 12:10PM

Judge Orders Return Of Deported Asylum-Seekers

https://www.npr.org/2018/08/09/637269721/judge-orders-return-of-deported-asylum-seekers?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=news


U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan, pictured in 2008, has temporarily blocked the Trump administration from deporting immigrants under new rules that largely bar asylum in domestic and gang violence cases.

Charles Dharapak/AP


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Charles Dharapak/AP

U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan, pictured in 2008, has temporarily blocked the Trump administration from deporting immigrants under new rules that largely bar asylum in domestic and gang violence cases.

Charles Dharapak/AP

Updated on Aug. 10 at 4 p.m. ET

Immigration officials have returned a mother and daughter to the United States after they were deported, which had angered a federal judge who was hearing their lawsuit.

The mother, known in court documents by the pseudonym Carmen to protect her identity, and her daughter were challenging Trump administration rules that largely bar the use of domestic and gang violence as the basis for asylum applications. District Judge Emmet Sullivan had been assured the pair would not be deported to El Salvador before midnight Thursday.

A transcript of a hearing on Thursday shows Sullivan being informed that even while a government attorney was making that assurance, the asylum-seekers were on a plane out of the country, having been deported.

Angered, Sullivan ordered the government to bring them back. He also threatened to hold Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen in contempt of court if they didn’t obey the order.

“This is pretty outrageous,” Sullivan said. “Somebody in pursuit of justice in a United States court is just — is spirited away while her attorneys are arguing for justice for her?”

In addition to ordering the government to get the mother and daughter back, Sullivan blocked the Trump administration from deporting eight other immigrants — currently held in detention — who are part of the same lawsuit against the government for allegedly wrongfully rejecting their claims for asylum.

The order issued Thursday stated that the defendants, including Sessions, Nielsen, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service Director Lee Francis Cissna and Executive Office of Immigration Review Director James McHenry, “shall return ‘Carmen’ and her daughter to the United States FORTHWITH.”

The judge had scheduled Thursday’s emergency hearing on the motion to block the deportation after learning of their imminent removal on Aug. 9. The government agreed that Carmen and her daughter “would not be removed prior to that time.”

But despite the government’s guarantee, Sullivan learned from the American Civil Liberties Union in open court that the two had been removed from the Dilley South Texas Family Residential Center. It wasn’t until after the hearing that the government confirmed in an email that the two plaintiffs “were, in fact, on an airplane while the Court was hearing arguments” on their case.

As a result, the order states, “The Court informed government counsel that it would neither tolerate nor excuse any delay with compliance with this Order.”

The lawsuit — involving a group of asylum-seekers still in custody and others already deported — was filed Tuesday by the ACLU and Center for Gender & Refugee Studies.

It argues the administration is wrongly rejecting asylum claims based on domestic abuse and gang violence. The ACLU is asking the court to invalidate a decision by Sessions that says most victims of domestic abuse and gang violence cannot qualify for asylum.

“In its rush to deport as many immigrants as possible, the Trump administration is putting these women and children in grave danger of being raped, beaten, or killed,” Jennifer Chang Newell, managing attorney with the ACLU’s Immigrants’ Rights Project, said in a statement.

“We are thrilled the stay of removal was issued but sickened that the government deported two of our clients — a mom and her little girl — in the early morning hours. We will not rest until our clients are returned to safety.”

The Trump administration’s position is that many asylum-seekers are gaming the system by exaggerating their fear of returning home.

In the event that the government does not “fully comply” with Sullivan’s order to return Carmen and her daughter from El Salvador, the judge said, Sessions, Nielsen, Cissna and McHenry must appear in court to “SHOW CAUSE why they should not be held in CONTEMPT OF COURT.”

Sullivan directed the administration to give him a status update by Friday afternoon.

via NPR Topics: News https://ift.tt/2m0CM10

August 9, 2018 at 06:15PM

Jury Awards Terminally Ill Man $289 Million In Lawsuit Against Monsanto

https://www.npr.org/2018/08/10/637722786/jury-awards-terminally-ill-man-289-million-in-lawsuit-against-monsanto?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=news


Plaintiff Dewayne Johnson, shown on July 9, listening to his attorney speak about his condition during the Monsanto trial in San Francisco. On Friday, a jury awarded Johnson $289 million in damages after ruling that Monsanto intentionally concealed the health risks of its popular Roundup products.

Josh Edelson/AP


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Josh Edelson/AP

Plaintiff Dewayne Johnson, shown on July 9, listening to his attorney speak about his condition during the Monsanto trial in San Francisco. On Friday, a jury awarded Johnson $289 million in damages after ruling that Monsanto intentionally concealed the health risks of its popular Roundup products.

Josh Edelson/AP

At 42, Dewayne Johnson developed a bad rash that was eventually diagnosed as non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

Four years later Johnson — now near death, according to his doctors — has been awarded a staggering sum of $289 million dollars in damages in a case against agricultural giant Monsanto.

The former school groundskeeper sued the company, arguing that an herbicide in the weed killer Roundup, likely caused the disease. His lawyers also contended Monsanto failed to warn consumers about the alleged risk from their product.

On Friday, a San Francisco jury agreed. They deliberated for three days before awarding Johnson $250 million in punitive damages and $39 million in compensatory damages.

“The jury found Monsanto acted with malice and oppression because they knew what they were doing was wrong and doing it with reckless disregard for human life,” said Robert F. Kennedy Jr., one of Johnson’s attorneys, according to the Associated Press.

“This should send a strong message to the boardroom of Monsanto,” Kennedy added.

Johnson’s is the first of hundreds of cancer-patient cases against Monsanto and could be a bellwether of what lies ahead for the company.

As NPR’s Bill Chappell reported:

“Claims against Monsanto received a boost in 2015, when the International Agency for Research on Cancer – part of the World Health Organization — announced that two pesticides, including glyphosate, are ‘probably carcinogenic to humans.’

Monsanto is now facing hundreds of lawsuits, many of which were filed after that 2015 announcement. Dozens of the suits were joined to be heard in the court of U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria – who, even as he allowed the case to proceed, said the plaintiffs ‘appear to face a daunting challenge’ in supporting their claims at the next phase of the case.”

“We were finally able to show the jury the secret, internal Monsanto documents proving that Monsanto has known for decades that … Roundup could cause cancer,” Johnson’s lawyer Brent Wisner said in a statement, according to The Guardian.

Monsanto has consistently denied that glyphosate-based herbicides cause cancer.

“We are sympathetic to Mr. Johnson and his family,” Monsanto Vice President Scott Partridge said in a statement following the verdict. “Today’s decision does not change the fact that more than 800 scientific studies and reviews … support the fact that glyphosate does not cause cancer, and did not cause Mr. Johnson’s cancer.”

He confirmed the company will appeal the decision “and continue to vigorously defend this product, which has a 40-year history of safe use and continues to be a vital, effective, and safe tool for farmers and others.”

via NPR Topics: News https://ift.tt/2m0CM10

August 10, 2018 at 09:12PM

The 10 Most Badass Jean-Luc Picard Moments In Star Trek History

https://www.gamespot.com/gallery/the-10-most-badass-jean-luc-picard-moments-in-star/2900-2198/

The greatest Starfleet captain in history is returning to the small screen.

On August 4, Patrick Stewart announced he will reprise his role as Jean-Luc Picard for a new Star Trek series on CBS All Access. It will take place after Star Trek: Deep Space Nine in the continuity. Finally, longtime Trekkers will have a sequel to the original television Prime timeline, as opposed to the more recent Kelvin timeline of the films.

It’s what fans have wanted for years; Star Trek: Enterprise and Star Trek: Discovery, while new "Treks," were predecessors to the original, Kirk-led series. Kirk had the guts and the heart, but Picard had the intellect, discipline, and diplomacy skills.

Our world needs more of Picard’s firm leadership, ethical principles, and unshakeable resolve. Here are Captain Picard’s 10 Most Badass Moments, whether he was in the field, in the ready room, on the bridge, or in his quarters. His greatest weapon was his ability to speak eloquently and forcefully to truth.

For more on Star Trek, check out the history of Jean-Luc Picard, how Quark became a fully realized Ferengi on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, and the latest on the next two Star Trek movies.

10. Picard Defends Data’s Humanity

Episode: "Measure of a Man" (Season 2, Episode 9)

In what is widely considered the show’s first "classic" episode, Picard defends Data’s life against a Starfleet scientist who wants to dismantle him, seeing him as little more than an advanced machine. But Picard ends all argument by challenging anyone to define and quantify what it means to have a consciousness. He also asks the court to consider what future generations will think of them: "Are you prepared to condemn him and all who come after him, to servitude and slavery? Your Honor, Starfleet was founded to seek out new life; well, there it sits!"

9. Picard Invented A Tactical Maneuver

Episode: "The Battle" (Season 1, Episode 9)

Picard invented the badass "Picard Maneuver" as a younger man. His ship, the Stargazer, was attacked by a Ferengi vessel. Picard responded by going into warp (faster than light speed) and then immediately dropping out of warp. Thus, there appeared to be two ships, and the Ferengi sensors couldn’t accurately target its weapons. Cadets studied the maneuver in Starfleet Academy; it wasn’t until years later that Data devised a defense against it.

8. Alternate Timeline Picard Is Willing To Die For a Better Timeline

Episode: "Yesterday’s Enterprise" (Season 3, Episode 15)

Alternate timeline and time travel stories are integral to Star Trek. And one of the best TNG episodes to deal with these themes is "Yesterday’s Enterprise." In an alternate timeline, Starfleet is at war with the Klingon empire; the Enterprise’s bridge is a well-oiled battle station. But when alternate Picard learns that there is a better, more peaceful future than the one he’s living, he’s willing to sacrifice himself to make it possible. Before leading the Enterprise on its suicide mission to the time rift, he delivers a badass pep talk: "Let’s make sure history never forgets the name: Enterprise."

7. Picard Delivers Another Brilliant Courtroom Speech

Episode: "The Drumhead" (Season 4, Episode 21)

Picard, in the course of defending a man’s reputation, is himself accused of betraying Starfleet by an overzealous, retired admiral. After she taunts him over his experience with the Borg (Picard was assimilated and forced to participate in the killing of over 10,000 people), Picard maintains his composure. He then drops a brilliant monologue about the dangers of human rights abuses, slippery slopes discrimination, and overreaching jurisdiction. Picard then sits back like a boss; the ex-admiral melts down from his defiance and undermines her own argument.

6. Picard Pilots The Enterprise Out Of An Asteroid Field

Episode: "Booby Trap" (Season 3, Episode 6)

There’s little reason why Picard should be the one to do this; we’ve been told, multiple times, that Commander Riker is the best pilot on the entire ship. But Picard manages to navigate the Enterprise out of an asteroid belt. And when the ship loses momentum, he uses the gravitational pull of a large asteroid to slingshot the ship to safety. Talk about coolness under pressure. Even Data is duly impressed.

5. Picard Scolds Wesley Crusher Like He’s A Little Boy

Episode: "The First Duty" (Season 5, Episode 19)

Everyone hates Wesley Crusher. He’s a know-it-all kid who, for the first season, thought he knew better than most of the adults around him. But four years later, Wesley lied about his actions while a cadet in Starfleet Academy. And Picard goes full Dad Mode on Wesley for his lame "I didn’t technically lie" defense.

4. Picard Takes a Knife To The Heart, Again

Episode: "Tapestry" (Season 6, Episode 15)

When Picard is near death due to his bionic heart, he’s given a chance by Q (a nearly omnipotent being) to relive the moment when he lost his original heart; he was stabbed, through the chest, during a bar fight while he was a cadet.

But he later learns that this event had a butterfly effect on his life; it made him the complex man he would eventually become. And Picard, who would rather die a great man than live as a timid man, decides to go back in time and change history again, this time by willingly getting stabbed in the chest. Now that’s badass.

3. Picard Persuades Three Timelines To Save Humanity

Episode: "All Good Things…" (Season 7, Episodes 25 & 26)

The TNG series finale is as close to perfect as it gets. Every cast member shines. Picard saves humanity, again. And the interactions with Q bring the show full circle, back to its pilot where the Enterprise crew was put on trial for humanity’s crimes.

In the episode, Picard bounces between the past, the present, and the future, and he must convince all three Enterprise crews to go into an anomaly and create a static warp shell; the action will effectively destroy each ship.

The past Enterprise crew barely knows him. The future Enterprise crew thinks he’s going senile. But Picard’s powers of persuasion are strong. And all three Enterprise crews eventually march to their deaths on Picard’s word that they are dying for a greater good.

2. Picard Sees Four Lights

Episode: "Chain of Command" (Season 6, Episodes 10 & 11)

Picard finds himself chained, hanging in a Cardassian military officer’s office. He is being tortured in exchange for tactical information. And in a clear tribute to George Orwell’s 1984, the Cardassian asks Picard to count the lights in the room (there are four), while continually telling him there are actually five.

This particular clip shows Picard at his most defiant. Even when he’s on the cusp of losing everything he holds dear, Picard does not break, and he takes pity on his captor. And yes, there are four lights. There are always four lights, Jean-Luc.

1. Picard Draws The Line Here, And No Further!

Movie: Star Trek: First Contact

Picard is known for his even temper; he rarely loses control of himself. Data, who for most of the series had no emotions, loses control more often than Picard. But in the second TNG film, Star Trek: First Contact, Picard faces down the Borg. And all of the trauma they inflicted on him over the years comes bubbling to the service.

When Lily Sloane refers to him as Captain Ahab and calls Picard out on his destructive vengefulness, the good captain melts down and becomes angrier than we’ve ever seen him. It’s unsettling and frightening to see Picard in such a state.

But of course, he soon composes himself and sees Sloane’s point of view. Picard knows right from wrong, and he always swallows his pride to admit the latter. What a badass.

via GameSpot’s PC Reviews https://ift.tt/2mVXxXH

August 10, 2018 at 04:47PM

What Japan Does Better Than America

http://www.dorkly.com/post/86880/things-japan-does-better-than-america

Japan is a world leader in technology and and in growing older, but also a Juggernaut of innovation in other, less glamorous fields. The following entries show how Japan is building a prettier, more efficient country of the future, starting with a municipal staple that hides the rivers of poo that run beneath us each and every day…  

 

1. Japan’s manhole covers make sewage look beautiful

 
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Sharat Ganapati/rumpleteaser
 

Japan’s streets are studded with decorative manhole covers that are so nice they’ve inspired a generation of "drainspotters," some of which travel from distant corners of the globe.

It started in 1985 when a high-up construction ministry official suggested that decorative manhole covers could raise awareness and public support for sewage-related issues. Bureaucrats in other countries would have ignored the suggestion in favor of growing their own salaries, but the conscientious Japanese embraced their artistic nature, and now the country boasts an estimated 12,000 decorative manhole covers, with designs specific to the area.

The most common themes are natural, including endemic animals and plants. But festivals and other cultural scenes, as well as landmarks, are also common. No tentacle monsters, though. At least not yet.

 

There’s even a 1990s-style GeoCities webpage (it’s still an active hosting service in Japan) devoted to the practice, the Japan Society of Manhole Covers, which appears to be uploaded almost daily with contributions from freelance drainspotters.

Some are more dedicated than others, like Hidetoshi Ishii. Over the past couple of decades Ishii has been logging up to 100 kilometers a day on his bike like some crazy Final Fantasy sidequest, and has visited approximately 1,700 municipalities and taken more than 4,500 photos.

The manhole covers are so popular that the Sewer System PR Platform even released trading cards based on the sought-after art. 

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The cards are so popular that they reached the one-million issued mark in 2017. They say you can’t polish a turd, but these sewage covers might be the next best thing.

2. Demolishing buildings, the safe and eco-friendly way

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AFP
 

Apparently, there’s no good way to demolish buildings that are 100 meters or taller. Big wrecking balls are too cumbersome and implosions are too messy. And in the 21st-goddamn-century there needs to be a less primitive way to disassemble big things.

A few firms in Japan, like the Taisei Corporation, are employing a floor-by-floor demolition approach. It’s called the Ecological Reproduction System, and it guts the building from the inside, then uses cranes that generate electricity to move the materials to the ground.

The eco-friendly method slashes carbon emissions by a whopping 85 percent and "reduces noise by between 17 and 23 decibels and dust levels by 90 percent." Check it out in action, pitted against Tokyo’s 463-foot-tall Grand Prince Hotel Akasaka.

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The Japan Times
 

Like Japan’s human population, its buildings trend towards the elderly side of the age spectrum. At least 99 of Tokyo’s 30-40-year-old skyscrapers will approach their theoretical expiration date in the early 2020s, according to the Taisei Corporation’s Hideki Ichihara. You know, if the world doesn’t go up in flames by then.

3. An overwhelming elderly population is cared for in part by robots

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FT
 

Speaking of the aging population, Japan is one of the oldest countries in the world with nearly 27 percent of its 127 million people are aged 65 or above, as of 2016. And as of 2015, 1 in every 8 men and 1 in every 5 women in this demographic live alone.

And Japan is running out of workers to care for its increasingly-ubiquitous old people. Governmental agencies predict that by 2025 there will be a shortfall of 375,000 caregivers. In typical Japanese fashion, they’re solving the problem with robots.

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Riken
 

Not faceless industrial robots, but whimsical robot bears like the 300-lbs Robear, built to carry frail or disabled elderly persons and assists them in going to the bathroom, getting into or out of bed or tubs or wheelchairs. Robots probably won’t replace nurses and other staff, at least not for awhile, but they’ve been deployed as helpers in about 8 percent of Japanese nursing homes so far.

One such robot is known as Dinsow:

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Dinsow is $2,500 personal "health tracker," that also reminds its charge to take their pills, and automatically Facetimes calls from family members or doctors,, so seniors don’t have to fumble around with confusing smartphone technologies.

And then there’s Pepper, a $1900 humanoid "carerobo" from Softbank:

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Japan Entertainment 
 

Pepper is more of an emotional-and-spiritual-support robot who, according to its makers, can discern human emotions, reply in kind, and "make jokes, dance, and amuse people…" with its programmed "…heart and emotions." At the Shintomi nursing home in Tokyo, it leads sing-alongs and group activities.

Other robotic implements are also in use, like Cyberdyne’s exoskeleton, which helps staff lift and carry patients. We’re almost positive the fact that it shares the name with the evil robot coporation that ends the world in the Terminator movies is pure coincidence.

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AFP 
  

Other types of automated tools are in use as well, including sensors alert staff to patients that are in danger of falling out of bed, and others, like biometric poo sensors placed on the body, track intestinal movement and predict when someone might need to use the bathroom.

Overall, robotics have helped around 1/3rd of surveyed seniors become happier and more autonomous, and about 5,000 care homes in Japan are utilizing robotics of some kind. The main impediment is cost, but subsidies and financial assistance from insurance groups like AIG provide a boost and could revolutionize the elder care industry. That, the machines will take over and plunge us into a cyberdystopia. It’s a coin-toss at this point.

4. Japanese kids roam free on the streets to this day

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The Feed 
 

Nowadays, parents are making all sorts of efforts to protect their ever-dumber children. Safety locks are on everything, you can’t get the good Kinder Surprise eggs unless you go to the Russian market, and kids are overall likelier to be discouraged from basic kid stuff, like walking to the park.  

In Japan, children are as independent as they were in the 50s, and often go out alone and navigate bus routes and subway stations to run errands for the family or see their friends. Partially, it’s because Western parents worry about exposing their precious little ones to street crime and perverts. Japanese parents worry about those things too, but Japan has some of the safest streets in the world, and the only are perverts are emigrant weebs.

Another reason, according to cultural anthropologist Dwayne Dixon, is "group reliance," the ingrained belief that it is every one’s unshirkable duty to serve their compatriots. Children are given household tasks and taught to be self-reliant at 2-or-3-years-old, and at school they learn to serve food and clean up after themselves – some schools don’t even have janitors, because kids do all the work.

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So if grandma needs cigarettes or whatever the kids are happy to run and get them, because it benefits the community. Japan even has an entire television show devoted to this premise, called Hajimete no Otsukai (My First Errand), and it’s been running for 25 years. Think of it as the complete opposite of COPS. 

5. A simple, clever way to increase driver safety

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Wikipedia
 

New safety features are eliminating many of the dangers of driving, but the biggest risk to everybody’s safety sits behind the wheel. And Japan found a simple, non-insulting way to draw attention to drivers’ potential shortcomings: stickers.

For example, new drivers have to display the Shoshinsa mark, or "green leaf mark," to let other commuters know that the occupant is a novice.

Beginners must keep the decal for at least their first year, though they’re free to leave it on as long as they’d like. Theoretically, they can leave it for several decades, at which point they’d have to switch to the Koreisha mark, recommended at 70-years-old and mandated at 75.

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In 2011, some folks realized that a dying leaf might not be the best way to represent the elderly, so the sticker was replaced with a multi-colored clover that doesn’t remind old people of death. Or at least not as much.

More recently in Okinawa and Hokkaido, The Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, and Transport unveiled new "a foreigner is driving" magnets for rental cars, as part of their preparations to welcome the assload of tourists that will no doubt flood in as the 2020 Olympics draw near. Though these aren’t legally required like some others.

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A few other countries, like Australia and India, also assign specific decals to designate those with limited driving abilities. In the United States, only New Jersey mandates that beginners identify themselves, with a small red square on the license plate.

Unlike the Japanese, who proudly exhibit the stickers because it’s their patriotic duty not commit vehicular homicide, New Jersey’s teens sometimes forgo the decal because it’s "uncool." But they probably shouldn’t, because a study found that it "reduced crashes by 9.5 percent during their first two years of use," resulting in 3,200 fewer accidents. But is it really worth it if it makes you uncool?

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August 10, 2018 at 06:16AM