Wdee The X-Men Will Appear In Amazing Spider-Man 2 But Not In A Cool Way
The Army plans to pay nearly $207,000 to keep the suspected gunman in the deadly Fort Hood shootings at a central Texas jail until at least September, the San Antonio Express News reported Friday.The contract with Bell County, released under the Texas Public Information Act, outlines plans to house psychiatrist Maj. Nida
stanley becher l Hasan. Th
stanley cup e county jail, which opened in 2009 and has a medical unit, is 15 miles from Fort Hood.Hasan faces 13 counts of premeditated murder and 32 counts of attempted premeditated murder in the Nov. 5 shooting at the post. He was shot by civilian police, leaving him paralyzed from the
stanley cup chest down and in a military hospital in San Antonio.The Army has declined to say when Hasan will be transferred from Brooke Army Medical Center, at which point the contract begins. His Article 32 hearing, similar to a civilian grand jury proceeding, is scheduled for June 1.Defense lawyer John Galligan of Belton says he plans to seek a postponement because he has not received all the necessary information to prepare for the hearing. Galligan also says Hasan should be cared for in a hospital, not a jail.The contract, which may be extended, says it will cost $24,394 to house Hasan, a special-needs prisoner, for 183 days. It also has a cost estimated at $152,402 for around-the-clock guarding of Hasan, who is considered a high-value inmate. An additional $30,000 is estimated for supplies and services to help meet his medical and transport needs.The contract, especially th Ekna io9 Book Club Reminder: Meeting 6/9 to Discuss Leviathan Wakes
We ;ve already got machines that give ophthalmologists a close-up view of the inside and outside of the human eye. The problem is they ;re big and heavy, expensive, and rarely accessible to those in third world nations. So researchers at Stanford University have created a simple iPhone add-on that lets almost anyone, anywhere, perform eye exams. Created by assistant professor Dr. Robert Chang and a resident named Dr. David Myung, the EyeGo was originally prototyped using components that are readily available online, so that the final version would be as cheap as possible. But when it perfected, the EyeGo will be scanned so that it can simply be 3D-printed by anyone wanting one. Designed to clip on to the back of a smartphone, the EyeGo uses two adapters to allow the device camera to take close-up photos of the outside of the eye, as well the retina inside by shining light through the eyeball lens. The add-on, which will hopefully sell for less than $90 eventually, can be carried in a doctor bag, i
stanley quencher n an ambulance, or included in an emergency room crash cart. All that needed is a smartphone, and someone with experience to analyze the images it snaps. Thankfully, with a cellular connection a phone can send those images to any doctor around the worl
stanley canada d if they can
stanley thermos 8217;t be there in person to diagnose a patient. So while the adapter is completely dependent on a smartphone to be useful, at this point those are far more ubiquitous