Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts

Friday, 14 August 2015

Bikeshare Hawaii invites public to pick technology



The company is looking at four different systems that are currently used around the globe. Two of the systems, Nextbike and Social Bicycles, utilize technology on the bikes themselves, while two others, Cycloshare and PBSC Urban Solutions, use so-called ‘smart’ docking stations. Bikeshare Hawaii is holding two open houses this month for residents to give each system a try and provide their feedback.
"With a smart kiosk and a bike, all the technology is in the kiosk, not all of it, but most of it,” said Lori McCarney, Bikeshare’s CEO. “With a smart bike, most of the technology is actually on the bike."
The open houses will be held at the Design Center on Sunday, Aug. 23 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., and Wednesday, Aug. 26 from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Each visitor will be given a short survey to find out which system they prefer and how they plan on using Bikeshare.
“People can sit on the bikes, touch the bikes and then vote on different things that they like or don't like and let us know what they think," said McCarney.
The nonprofit launched in January 2014 with the help of a $2 million grant from the city and state, but needs to raise another $5 million before the program becomes a reality. 
“We’re looking at different things from donations, sponsorships and even financing to get us going from a capital side,” said McCarney. “Once we’re up and operational, we will be self-sufficient.”
Bikeshare Hawaii will feature 200 docking stations and 2,000 bikes, while covering 7.2 square miles. The initial area of operation will stretch from Diamond Head to Chinatown on the makai side of the H1 Freeway, and include Makiki as well as the University of Hawaii. Kiosks will be placed 800 feet to 900 feet apart, or less than a quarter mile. The expectation is for thousands of rides each and every day.
"Once we get ramped up, we think we can get 5,000 to 10,000 rides on these bikes and try to get them used somewhere between two and five times a day," said Ben Trevino, Bikeshare’s president and COO.
The concept of bike sharing is simple, and has caught on in many large cities in Europe and the U.S. mainland. You check out a bike for a one-way trip, and then give it back when you arrive at your destination. Although you’ll likely need a debit or credit card to participate, the expected price is nearly within anyone’s reach.
"Sixty minutes of ride time, that doesn't expire, for about $7,” said Trevino, “And 500 minutes of ride time, that also doesn't expire, for $25 dollars."
Bikeshare Hawaii also anticipates offering monthly rates to local residents for either $15 or $25 depending on the plan. Anyone who rents a bike on a daily rate will be allowed to rollover unused minutes during their next trip.
“We’ve talked to other people in this industry and not all the systems do it that way, but that’s the direction that people really wish they can go,” said Trevino. “We’re going to try it out because we think it’s the best.”

Abusers use technology to stalk victims, police say



HASTINGS, Minn. - Inside the Dakota County Sheriff's Office, the new digital forensic task force is working to stop a disturbing trend in stalking and domestic abuse cases.
Investigators say abusers, mostly men, are using technology to stalk their victims.
"It's kind of a creep factor, for all of us," said Sheriff Tim Leslie. "And much of it is unknown to the society and the public."
The most recent example comes from Apple Valley last month, when Apple Valley Police and the new forensics unit caught Michael Condon Jr. in the act, according to court records.
Police were tracking him after a woman he was in a relationship with filed an order of protection against him.
Documents allege, Condon repeatedly violated that order, even buying a "GPS mobile tracker and weather proof case". Investigators believe he was going to use it on his ex's vehicle, saying in a search warrant it's "a device that can be installed on vehicles to covertly track their location."
"We've really seen an increase in cases where abusers are using technology," said Ann Sheridan with advocacy group 360 Communities in Dakota County.
Sheridan is the Director of Violence Prevention and Intervention for non-profit group. She says she and her staff see victims come in for help on a regular basis, saying their abusers used smart phones or other technology to track them.
"Definitely within the last year, it's been at least one a day," she said.
Which is why she's glad to see the new forensics unit in Dakota County working to stop the abuse before it happens.
"So we focus on those small violations to prevent it from getting worse," said Leslie.
The task force has six people working in it, some of whom are from area police departments within the county, including Apple Valley
Apple Valley Police did not want to comment on the Condon case, but said the department is better equipped to combat this problem.
After the order of protection was filed, Apple Valley Police got a warrant to put a GPS tracker on Condon's car, according to a criminal complaint. But when a detective realized the tracker had been removed four days later, "the detective asked for extra patrols around the victim's residence and contacted the victim to advise her of the situation."
The complaint also alleges when a police officer drove to the victim's house, the officer noticed Condon driving nearby and pulled him over after he did not use a turn signal and his brake light was out. The charges say he was only 382 feet from the victim's home, at which point Condon was arrested.
Condon is in jail. KARE 11 tried to find and contact his attorney for comment, but was not successful.

Schools taking technology to the next level



Several area school corporations already have initiated one-to-one technology in their districts, and in some cases are moving forward to the next level.
Tri-Creek Superintendent Debra Howe said the School Board made technology and project-based learning a priority several years ago.
In 2012, Lowell High School and Lowell Middle School began a one-to-one laptop program that has grown to encompass a take home program for more than 2,000 students in grades 6-12. Every student at Lowell High School and Lowell Middle School is issued a MacBook Air laptop to maximize opportunities for creativity and collaboration.
The Educational Technology Department also supports the growth of online and blended learning in the classroom in order to prepare students for their future where anywhere, anytime learning is the norm.
"Since implementation of the one-to one laptop initiative and adoption of the New Tech project-based instructional framework, the district has realized an increase in dual college credits, number of students engaged in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) and career and technical courses," she said.
She said the graduation rate has gone up 8 percentage points to 96 percent.
Howe said the 2015-16 school year will provide students the opportunity to take high school courses such as bio-medical, computer science, aerospace and digital media design.
Tri-Creek teachers are excited about the prospect and participated in training throughout the summer.
Bill Holland, a Lowell Middle School seventh-grade math teacher, said technology helps students see how what they learn connects with the real world.
"Our goal is to get them engaged in their own learning so they understand that everything has a purpose," he said.
Lowell High School junior Nathan Archer, 16, was one of half dozen students helping out in the technology department this summer with district director of educational technology Jay Blackmon. The teens formatted the computers and prepared them for the fall.
Purdue University North Central professor David Pratt said it's important to have a model or guideline as schools integrate the use of technology in the classroom.
"Technology has to be used to transform learning," he said. "As teachers integrate technology, they have to think of it as a substitution for the way things are currently being taught. Use technology to augment, modify or redesign what teachers do in the classroom."
Pratt said he likes the move to one-to-one technology because it gets away from "let's all go to the computer lab" -- something not necessarily connected to the classroom content. Pratt, who teaches education technology to education majors at PNC in Westville, said technology is now being seen as integral to the classroom.
East Chicago Superintendent Youssef Yomtoob and technology director Mary Jensen said curriculum will drive the use of technology.
"We had challenges in our one-to-one take-home program previously," Jensen said. "We are close to one-to-one in the high school. We have made sure that every student has access to a computer. We also have multiple computer labs in the building to augment instruction."
Munster Superintendent Jeff Hendrix said the district constantly researches and reviews new advances in technology, but like most school districts, there is not adequate funding available to pursue some of the new technologies.
"We piloted the bring-your-own devices this summer with success," he said. "We hope to incorporate this practice in the next two years."
Hobart Superintendent Peggy Buffington said the district will be one-to-one this school year, along with a new student information system.   
In Crown Point, some parents say they are excited to see the the take-home tablet program expanding to the younger grades this fall. Teachers worked on accompanying curriculum last school year to integrate the use of the tablets with state standards. Some elementary-aged students will receive a tablet to take home.
Hebron Superintendent Nathan Kleefisch said when he became superintendent last fall, there was one-to-one technology in grades 8-12. This school year every students in middle and high school will have a laptop. Last year, students eighth-graders had Dell computers and the high school had new Chrome books.
"This year, we bought 200 new Chrome books and students in grade 7-12 will use them," he said. "The sixth-graders will get the Dell books. The purpose of this is so that students in grades 7-12 are acclimated to the same type of technology."
Porter Township Superintendent Stacey Schmidt said they are in the third year of the one-to-one initiative at Boone Grove High School, and will roll out a one-to-one initiative for grades 4-8 this month.
"We will roll out a device for each student in grades K-3 during the first semester," she said.

Could new technology solve the Gardner heist?



The recent discovery of old surveillance footage that energized the investigation into the 1990 Gardner Museum heist has private investigators and analysts questioning how technological advancements can further be utilized to help solve Boston’s last great mystery.
“Technology is really changing the way this case is being handled,” said Chris Marinello, an attorney for the Art Loss Register of London, which maintains an international database of more than 360,000 stolen, looted, or missing works, including 1,000 from Massachusetts.
Marinello, who has monitored the Gardner investigation, said technological advancements, such as facial recognition, video enhancement, and fingerprint and DNA analysis — and the development of online databases like his own — may be the tools needed to finally solve the world’s greatest unsolved art theft.
The point was crystallized last week when law enforcement officials publicly released never-before-seen video from the museum’s security system. It sparked an Internet frenzy as people sought to enhance the video and identify an unknown man whom a guard had let into the museum 24 hours before the robbery, in violation of security protocol and under questionable circumstances.

Analysts, some with old ties to the Gardner probe, question whether new technology can or has been used to examine pieces of original evidence in the case, such as the duct tape used to tie down the guards on duty that night and the handcuffs placed on them.
“Any of the original items that were seized at the time of the crime could be retested with better technology now, so that could be one area where they could make some progress,” said Brian Kelly, a lawyer with Nixon Peabody and the former head of the public corruption unit in the US attorney’s office, who oversaw the Gardner investigation.
Any strategy to raise public awareness of the artworks, Kelly said, can aid in the investigation, noting it was a public tip that led to the arrest and ultimate conviction in 2013 of notorious gangster James “Whitey” Bulger.
“Certainly, keeping it in the news is helpful because it does lead to tips, and at some point they will get lucky,” Kelly said. “They just have to get lucky once.”
Kristen Setera, a spokeswoman for the Boston office of the FBI, said she could not say whether any of the evidence from the night of the robbery has been tested with new technology, citing the sensitivity of the ongoing investigation.
She said, however, that authorities received more than 40 tips related to last week’s release of the surveillance footage, and investigators “are working diligently to vet them all.”
The release of the video pumped new vigor into the decades-old investigation, which has long stymied law enforcement officials.
Two men posting as police officers entered the museum just after 1 a.m. on March 18, 1990, saying they were responding to a disturbance. After they tied up the guards, they made off with 13 works, including a Vermeer, a Manet, and three Rembrandts, one of them his only seascape, “The Storm on the Sea of Galilee.”
No one was ever charged, and the museum has offered a $5 million reward for the return of the works of art. US Attorney Carmen M. Ortiz said she would consider granting immunity to anyone who has the paintings in exchange for their return.
“The issue now is maybe convincing someone to take the reward money that’s on the table,” said Thomas Shamshak, a private investigator and a former police detective and chief in several towns in Massachusetts, who has followed the case.
Recently, attention again turned to an aging Connecticut mobster whom authorities suspect has information about the location of the paintings that he is withholding. Officials said in court records filed last week that reputed Philadelphia Mafia soldier Robert Gentile has lied about the paintings. He claimed to a cooperating witness in 2010 that he had access to two paintings and wanted to sell them, though Gentile has told authorities he did not know the location of the paintings. He failed lie detector tests.
Attention in the past week also turned to former Gardner guard Richard Abath, who let the two police officers into the museum the night of the robbery.
Abath has denied any wrongdoing, but the museum footage released last week shows him letting an unidentified man into the museum the night before the heist — leading authorities to question whether it was a dry run of the robbery. He never disclosed that he let anyone into the museum under such circumstances.
Abath, now in his late 40s and living in Brattleboro, Vt., could not be reached for comment despite numerous attempts to get in touch with him. He has told authorities he has no recollection of the encounter and cannot identify the man in the video.
The former guard chronicled the theft in his college theses in 2010 for a creative nonfiction writing program, which was obtained this week by The Boston Globe.
In it, he writes that he was surprised when FBI agents approached him 18 years after the theft, saying they evidently never discounted him as a suspect.
He said at that time that he was considering writing a book because, “I wonder if some detail that I don’t know is important might turn out to be very important.”

Pope Francis: Technology + greed = disaster



A superficial review of Laudato Si’ could lead the reader to think that Pope Francis is a Luddite. He has very critical things to say about technology, especially when it is connected to greed.
The goal of technology, he argues, should not be to increasingly replace human work with machines in order to save money and make more profit. Like Pope John Paul II, Francis holds work in high esteem. “Work is a necessity, part of the meaning of life on this earth, a path to growth, human development and personal fulfilment.”
But Francis begins his examination of technology by acknowledging in chapter 3 of his encyclical that we are the beneficiaries of two centuries of technological advances. “Technology has remedied countless evils that used to harm and limit human beings,” he writes. But he notes that the power that comes from technology can be used by those with knowledge and economic resources to dominate humanity and the entire world.
“We need but think of the nuclear bombs dropped in the middle of the twentieth century,” he explains, “or the array of technology which Nazism, Communism and other totalitarian regimes have employed to kill millions of people, to say nothing of the increasingly deadly arsenal of weapons available for modern warfare.”

Quoting Romano Guardini, he notes that there is a tendency to believe that every increase in power means “an increase of ‘progress’ itself” but in reality “contemporary man has not been trained to use power well.” Sadly, Pope Francis argues, “our immense technological development has not been accompanied by a development in human responsibility, values and conscience.”
Francis is especially critical of an undifferentiated and one-dimensional technocratic paradigm where the world (including human beings and material objects) is seen as something formless, completely open to manipulation. The goal is to extract everything possible from things while ignoring the reality in front of us.
This leads economists, financiers and experts in technology to accept the idea of unlimited growth “based on the lie that there is an infinite supply of the earth’s goods, and this leads to the planet being squeezed dry beyond every limit.”
In short, Francis does not think that technological products are neutral. Rather “they create a framework which ends up conditioning lifestyles and shaping social possibilities along the lines dictated by the interests of certain powerful groups.”
Francis saves his harshest words for economic interests who “accept every advance in technology with a view to profit, without concern for its potentially negative impact on human beings.” They show “no interest in more balanced levels of production, a better distribution of wealth, concern for the environment and the rights of future generations. Their behavior shows that for them maximizing profits is enough.”
In Francis’ mind, this is the cause of our current economic and environmental crisis. What is needed is a broader vision where “technology is directed primarily to resolving people’s concrete problems, truly helping them live with more dignity and less suffering.” Technology must serve humanity, not the market.
“Nobody is suggesting a return to the Stone Age,” he affirms, “but we do need to slow down and look at reality in a different way, to appropriate the positive and sustainable progress which has been made, but also to recover the values and the great goals swept away by our unrestrained delusions of grandeur.”
“Once the human being declares independence from reality and behaves with absolute dominion, the very foundations of our life begin to crumble,” Francis believes. Rather than being a cooperator with God in the work of creation, quoting John Paul II he says, “man sets himself up in place of God and thus ends up provoking a rebellion on the part of nature.”
For Francis, “the present ecological crisis is one small sign of the ethical, cultural and spiritual crisis of modernity.” Humanity “cannot presume to heal our relationship with nature and the environment without healing all fundamental human relationships” including our relationships with others and God.
At the heart of this crisis of modernity is a culture of relativism, but Francis, unlike his predecessors, believes that “practical relativism typical of our age is even more dangerous than doctrinal relativism.” In practical relativism, human beings “place themselves at the center” and “give absolute priority to immediate convenience and all else becomes relative.”
He is not surprised to see the culture of relativism, “which sees everything as irrelevant unless it serves one’s own immediate interests,” going hand and hand with “the omnipresent technocratic paradigm and the cult of unlimited human power.”
The result is “the mindset of those who say: Let us allow the invisible forces of the market to regulate the economy, and consider their impact on society and nature as collateral damage.” He condemns the “use and throw away” logic that “generates so much waste, because of the disordered desire to consume more than what is really necessary.”
In the later chapters of Laudato Si’ he will lay out his response to the environmental crisis, but even in chapter three he shows his support for an economy that favors productive diversity and small scale producers. “For example, there is a great variety of small-scale food production systems which feed the greater part of the world’s peoples, using a modest amount of land and producing less waste, be it in small agricultural parcels, in orchards and gardens, hunting and wild harvesting or local fishing.”
But he recognizes that small farmers and producers are threatened by economies of scale and by the difficulty they face in linking to regional and global markets because the infrastructure for sales and transport is geared to larger businesses.
He calls for government support of such small producers. “To ensure economic freedom from which all can effectively benefit,” he asserts, “restraints occasionally have to be imposed on those possessing greater resources and financial power.” He finds calls for “economic freedom” to be bogus when “real conditions bar many people from actual access to it.”
One might think that Francis is anti-business, but in fact he thinks “Business is a noble vocation, directed to producing wealth and improving our world. It can be a fruitful source of prosperity for the areas in which it operates, especially if it sees the creation of jobs as an essential part of its service to the common good.”
Francis’ words about domineering technology, a single-minded focus on profit, and practical relativism are prophetic and challenging. They fly in the face of many American cultural presuppositions. Pope Francis does not believe that technology and the market will magically provide the solution to social and environmental issues, rather they are part of the problem.
On the other hand, he believes that technology can and should be used to improve the lot of humanity and that business people are called to a noble vocation that is in service to the common good.
This is the third of a series of columns on the chapters of Laudato Si’. The first chapter was examined in “Pope Francis: 'Facts are more important than ideas.'”

Canada a new technology hotbed? If so, we need to commit to it



Khanjan Desai is the founder of Neverfrost, a nanotechnology startup based in Waterloo, Ont.
On May 9, The Globe and Mail published Canadians can innovate, but we’re not equipped to win, by former Research In Motion co-CEO Jim Balsillie. This is part of a series responding to and expanding on that essay.
Founding a startup is incredibly hard, and if there is anything you can leverage to increase your odds of success, do it.
This was the advice given to us during our time at Y Combinator, the U.S. seed fund, last summer when we were trying to decide whether to keep Neverfrost in Silicon Valley or return to Waterloo, Ont. We eventually decided to come back to Canada, but not for the reasons you might imagine.
It doesn’t frost in California. If we were going to commercialize an anti-frost innovation, we would have to be in a place where we could run field tests locally and be able to regularly interact with our customers to learn from their experiences. It’s a practical reason. But if Silicon Valley had the same frigid conditions as Canada, we would have stayed, without a doubt.
Silicon Valley is superior to any startup ecosystem in Canada. That’s a fact. Access to top-tier capital, world-class advisers and internationally vetted talent (especially for software startups) is second to none. Gaining access to such resources is a proven way of increasing the odds of success, and Canada is lagging.
When we made the decision to return, we had to accept the advantages and disadvantages of being in Canada, but it didn’t take long to notice the differences: The investor landscape is conservative, top talent prefer to emigrate to the larger pond down south, many entrepreneurs and investors are dreaming too small and government grants are great for slow death, but not rapid success.
However, we also saw a glimmer of hope in the ecosystem. We met angel investors who wouldn’t quibble over terms and instead focused on the vision and metrics of a startup. We met venture capitalists who were pushing founders to dream of creating multibillion-dollar companies, not short-term exit plans. We met entrepreneurs bold enough to persuade talented individuals to move their lives from Silicon Valley to join startups in Waterloo. They are an exciting subsegment of our startup ecosystem that are leading by example.
Supporting startups through this change are forward-thinking programs such as the Creative Destruction Lab at the University of Toronto and Velocity at the University of Waterloo. Velocity offers entrepreneurs an environment in which they can experiment with their startup in the early stages. For startups further along, the Creative Destruction Lab offers the strategic and tactical advice necessary to build a rapidly scalable business – this advice comes from extremely successful entrepreneurs who’ve been there and done it themselves.
The bad news? This small portion of the ecosystem alone isn’t going to solve the problem. We all (founders, investors, advisers, government granting bodies and support programs) need to think bigger. We also need to give up on trying to chase down the software successes of Silicon Valley. Just give up – it’s not going happen. This is not to discredit software opportunities; there are going to be many new innovations and successes there. But the end goal should be about making Canada the centre of gravity for another ecosystem.
In the words of Wayne Gretzky, we need to skate to where the puck is going to be, not where it has been.
The hardware opportunity has already become mainstream, and other ecosystems have already pounced on it, but Canada isn’t far behind. We are creating companies to solve complex problems in the health-medical and wearable-technology spaces, and applying complex nanotechnologies to revolutionize conventional markets.
Nanotechnology engineering graduates from the University of Waterloo are now starting companies at the same pace as any other program at the university, and a venture fund for innovations exclusively in the quantum domain was just created in Waterloo. Wearable-technology and machine-learning startups are booming, with the University of Toronto alumni leading the charge, and we’re just getting started. The Creative Destruction Lab is launching a separate stream to support machine-learning startups and Velocity recently launched the Velocity Foundry program to house startups that build physical products.
If Canada is going to become the hotbed for wearable technology or create a Quantum Valley in the Waterloo region, we need to commit to it. It’s much better to be extremely good at one thing than be mediocre at many things. We need founders who will think about building world-changing companies all the way to an initial public offering, not bank on small exits. We need investors who will stop quibbling over minute terms, but will instead fund deep-science ideas in addition to Internet and mobile startups. They also need to invest in bold founders earlier than they currently do. And we need government granting bodies to focus their funding on bold ideas that can be rapidly commercialized, not tax credits that lead to a slow death.
Putting Canada on the map as the hotbed for deep-science startups will also help us reduce the brain drain that currently plagues our country. To prevent top-tier talent from fleeing to greener pastures, we need to build world-leading companies here at home. Retaining that talent will, in turn, lead to the creation of more world-changing opportunities here, as those employees go on to found other startups.
Isn’t it about time we developed a new identity for Canada besides the land of hockey, maple syrup and poutine?

We're still ignoring the impact of technology on our economy



I have begun to realise there is probably little point in writing to newspapers regarding the impact of technology on the whole economic scene.

Seven years ago, I began to draw attention to the possibility of technology being the overwhelming influence on economic turmoil in the 21st century and the Irish Independent had the courage and commitment to freedom of speech to allow this divergent opinion be heard.
I consider newspapers the best and only avenue for a nonentity to express an argument which apparently terrorises the political and economic establishment to such a degree that they are unable to challenge the logic and their only defence is to ignore the argument being made.
The media in general has been badly served by economic commentators since the 2008 crash. There is a universal refusal to consider, much less discuss the impact of technology. The 21st century is personified by the genius of invention and innovation, which has taken economics onto an entirely new plateau of achievement and success.
The parameters which governed economic activity throughout history have crumbled; the laws of supply/demand and production/employment have been reversed.
Everyone knows the "Greek solution" is unworkable and doomed to failure, as discussed in your editorial (Irish Independent, August 12) yet it proceeds.
Chinese stock markets are in turmoil as growth there is halved in three years and destined to shrink further (the world is not big enough to consume all China can produce). Predictions of Wall Street collapse from eminent US economists grow louder by the day.
Baxter, an industrial robot which can replace human labour in small/medium output facilities, is available at less than $25,000, and dairy farming faces disaster due to milk oversupply exacerbated by the lunatic removal of quotas.
We have catastrophically misjudged the last seven years as a "recession", whereas it is a gigantic leap forward to a new economic era of abundance with greatly reduced dependence on human labour.
We resort to debt to try and sustain/resurrect growth and employment through bailouts, repayment restructuring and quantitative easing (banks provided the debt a decade ago) in a desperate attempt to pretend modern technology never happened. But it has happened.
Padraic Neary, Tubbercurry, Co Sligo
The Irish are migrants too
For once, I agree absolutely with the sentiments expressed by Zoe Lawlor in her incisive critique of the Irish media's recent coverage of the ongoing refugee crisis in the Mediterranean (Letters, Irish Independent, August 13).
Ms Lawlor goes right to the heart of the issue by forcefully condemning a media language that "dehumanises" these desperate people, and she articulates the outrage of Irish citizens at the callous use of terms like "migrants" about people who are desperately fleeing persecution in their chaotic and war-torn homelands. This is not merely offensive, but demeans the valiant efforts of our wonderful navy, which is rescuing people from certain death on a daily basis.
This is all the more pertinent when this human tragedy is often spun as one of simple economic migration. Imagine the media storm if a commentator used this template in a revisionist commentary on the million-and-a-half Irish men, women and children who fled starvation in the Great Famine of the 19th century.
Or to bring a contemporary face to Irish economic migration, the estimated 50,000 illegal Irish in America, none of whom fled the murder, torture or rape which would surely have been the fate of those vulnerable people who risk their lives to cross the Mediterranean.
Dr Kevin McCarthy, Kinsale, Co Cork
Humanitarian platitudes
Zoe Lawlor rightly points out that refugees and economic migrants trying to enter Europe are first and foremost human beings.
But I'm disappointed that leading lights such as President Michael D Higgins, former president Mary Robinson, and columnist Liz O'Donnell, who have all said that these people should be welcomed, have not had the honesty or courage to propose concrete figures on how many they think we should take in over the next year, five years, etc.
Do they want some restrictions or no restrictions? Generalised humanitarian platitudes sound nice, but are not very useful.
P Davis, Dublin 17
Rural areas are forgotten
I read the successful Garda unit set up to deal with criminal gangs is to be disbanded. It is the rural areas suffering most from these gangs. Whatever the Government might say, this would seem further evidence it does not give a damn about rural areas, with the closure of hospitals, post offices, garda stations, etc.
David Kelly, Crumlin, Dublin 12
Give Labour some credit
Quite a lot of Irish voters have refused to accept the Labour Party's input into the Government's successes in recent times. They complain of broken promises, etc.
They seem to forget the Labour Party didn't win the last election and had about a third of the seats Fine Gael won, and therefore couldn't deliver on some of its promises.
However, the impact the party has achieved must be seen in light of the fact that things could have been a lot worse if it wasn't in Government, particularly regarding social welfare, children's allowances, free travel for the elderly and free television allowances.
Certainly, the Government has got a number of things badly wrong, but look where our country is now - on the road to recovery.
Think of these things when you're casting your vote and close your ears to those shouting the loudest.
Name and address with Editor
Dáil gender quota a bad idea
Daithi McCarthaigh (Letters, Irish Independent, August 11) makes an impassioned plea in favour of forcing the electorate to elect at least 50pc of the next Dáil solely on the basis of their being women.
Of course, there is no mention of a minimum level of male representation. Such an idea would be misogynistic at best, and woman-hating at worst.
However, the most egregious inaccuracy is Mr MacCarthaigh's statement that: "Men bring passion. Women bring reason." Two of the greatest firebrands of the current Dáil (if not the greatest) are Mary Lou McDonald and Clare Daly.
Leave the electorate to decide who they want to lead them, and let the electorate bear the consequences.

10 Healthcare Technology Disruptors To Watch (All Led By Women)



Many women cite their company’s outdated maternity leave policies, lack of flexible work arrangements or salaries that are inadequate to cover the costs of childcare as their main reasons for exiting the tech industry. But not all sectors of tech are experiencing a female exodus. Women seem to be flourishing in healthcare technology. A studyrecently released by XX in Health, a national organization fostering female leadership in healthcare, found that women make up 78% of the healthcare workforce, and that firms with female leadership yield greater returns for investors.
 “Not only have we seen an increase in female leadership in the Health Tech industry, but there has been an increase in technologies aimed at helping women,” said Ann Fyfe, President and CEO of Fogarty Institute for Innovation (FII).  Founded by cardiovascular surgeon Thomas Fogarty to spearhead innovation in medical technology, FII had two of their female CEOs recognized by Forbes in the “30 Under 30” list for shaping healthcare in 2013 and 2014: Surbhi Sarna, co-founder and CEO of InPress, and Jessie Becker, co-founder and CEO of InPress Technologies.
Given the above, investors may want to keep an eye on some of these women-led healthcare tech disruptors. Here are ten to watch in 2015:
Wellthie - This healthcare tech company, based in New York City, is making it easier for consumers and small businesses to explore their health insurance options in a simple way. It is led by female CEO, Sally Poblete, an 18 year veteran of the health insurance industry. The make-up of Wellthie’s leadership team is 75% female.
Naia Health – This San Francisco-based health startup was created by entrepreneur and visionary, Janica Alvarez, to save parents time and worry by providing the world’s first smart breast pump. The new technology was invented when Janica had her first child, and quickly learned how frustrating the experience of pumping was.
Caremerge is an award-winning healthcare tech company based in Chicago that is revolutionizing care coordination and communication for seniors by providing a HIPAA-compliant web-based and mobile platform that allows family members to communicate in real time with doctors and health care providers caring for their loved ones. Women make up 70% of their workforce, and their entire leadership team is female.
Humetrix has developed health risk appraisals, chronic care management software, and consumer-friendly mobile device-based solutions that gives consumers their own health IT systems.  President and CEO Dr. Bettina Experton is also known for transforming Medicare’s Blue Button text file into a user-friendly iBlueButton app, which allows VA members to download their medical information from anywhere.
Cohero Health is developing an Apple Watch app so asthmatics can better track their medication protocol adherence and lung function. The company currently makes a medical device that captures important respiratory performance metrics that sync with its AsthmaHero mobile app.  The New York-based healthcare tech company is led by CEO Melissa Manice.  Manice is not only the founder and CEO of the company, but also the inventor of the product.
Force Therapeutics, based in New York City, is a recovery platform that enables patients and providers to help support post-acute rehab.  The company employs 50% women and is led by founder and female CEO Bronwyn Spira, an entrepreneur and 20-year veteran with clinical and managerial experience in several healthcare settings.
Flextronics is a $26 billion a year company with a strong footprint in biotech and 200,000 employees in 30 countries.  The company is led by Jeannine Sargent, President of Innovation and New Ventures at Flextronics.
Maven Clinic offers a tele-health platform that creates video appointments with healthcare providers for convenient quality care with a more human experience.  A majority of the providers are women who offer counseling around pre-natal, postpartum and pediatric care.  CEO Katherine Ryder, a former early stage investor with Index Ventures in London, noticed the gender discrepancy in the current landscape of healthcare, as well as a lack of female executives in the space. Maven Clinic was designed to fill this void.
AbilTo (pronounced “able to”) is a digital behavioral change therapy company that partners with health plans to offer behavioral change therapy programs over the phone and/or by secure video.  The C-suite is comprised largely of women and 80% of the corporate leadership is women.
MMJ Labs was founded by CEO Dr. Amy Baxter, the award-winning inventor of Buzzy, a drug-free, palm-sized needle pain blocker for both adults and children aged 4 and above.  Buzzy is FDA cleared to control pain from injections, IVs, phlebotomy and cosmetic injections, as well as for relief of musculoskeletal pain from a variety of conditions.