Best Leaf Blower
Posted in: Today's ChiliThe best electric leaf blower for most users is the [amazon link=”B07SMBDW61″ title=”DeWalt DCBL772X1 60 Volt” /]. It’s strong, durable and a full charge lasts around 30 minutes after which you could replace the battery with a spare one and keep going.
Down Time is a Jezebel series in which we ask our favorite artists and authors what art, books, and activities they’re turning to in this moment of isolation and uncertainty. First up is Jenny Odell, artist and author of the book How to Do Nothing, who tells us how she finds space for her avid bird-watching on the web.
Cats Is a 'Medieval Morality Play': 20 Highlights From Tom Hooper's Strange Director Commentary
Posted in: Today's ChiliCats has finally come home, and we’ve combed through the director commentary to uncover the film’s greatest secrets. It may be one of those movies that’s impossible to explain, but director Tom Hooper was determined to try.
Hallmark Channel Is Bringing Back Its Christmas Movies To Help You Self-Quarantine
Posted in: Today's ChiliThe “We Need a Little Christmas” marathon, which kicks off Friday, features 27 Hallmark holiday films.
Even though there are loads of projects that try to create an artificial neural network – Intel seems to be doing something interesting.
It looks like Intel is developing a computer chip that can potentially smell things like a human does.
Intel believes that they have built an algorithm that mimics the brain activity of a human being when we smell something and the chip will utilize that to detect the smell.
As of now, it will be limited to certain types of smell and of course because it is still impossible to make an artificial computer that would smell things like a human.
Here’s the official video explaining more about it:
Nabil Imam, a senior research scientist, who works with Intel Labs’ neuromorphic computing group at Cornell University is one of the key responsible members to make it happen.
Also, to clarify, the chip is known as Intel’s Loihi neuromorphic test chip (it is still in its experimental stage).
When the research scientist was asked about its future applications (use-cases), he mentioned it as a potential electric nose that can be used as a smart utility to detect specific kind of smell and notify you.
While it makes its way to improvement, we can think of better applications for it as well. What do you think?
Featured Image: Intel Newsroom
Intel Is Making A Chip That Will Smell Things Like A Human
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Life as a digital creative might be a little easier if you’re working from home during the COVID-19 pandemic. Serif is trotting out a number of deals for its Affinity apps to help out artists and photographers (and, of course, encourage them to buy s…
Vaping additive blamed for outbreak produces ‘exceptionally toxic’ byproducts
Posted in: Today's ChiliThe threat of vape lung seems to have receded to the distant past now that we are all facing the coronavirus, but new research has shed light on the nature of that much more limited epidemic. It turns out vitamin E acetate, the vape fluid additive until now merely associated with lung damage, converts into a toxic chemical cocktail when heated.
That vitamin E acetate is not healthy to inhale is not a surprise; the chemical, which essentially had been used to dilute THC oil in cheap aftermarket vape cartridges, was associated with lung damage in several studies cited by the CDC. But at the time it was more correlative than causative information — the oil was found in the lung tissues of those suffering from vape lung, but there was no proven mechanism for harm.
Now work from researchers at the Royal College of Surgeons, in Dublin, has shown that vitamin E acetate’s effects are not limited to sticking around in the lungs and gumming up operations there. In a paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Dan Wu and Donal O’Shea write:
A combined analytical, theoretical, and experimental study has shown that the vaping of vitamin E acetate has the potential to produce exceptionally toxic ketene gas…
Additionally, the pyrolysis [i.e. heating] of vitamin E acetate also produces carcinogen alkenes and benzene for which the negative long-term medical effects are well recognized.
In other words, heating up vitamin E acetate, on its own or in a mixture, provably produces a number of toxic and carcinogenic compounds. Other studies would have to establish the potential pathology of those compounds interacting with the lungs, bloodstream, etc., but it’s safe to say that this substance is an extremely dangerous one to be burning and inhaling.
The obvious question of why it was put into cartridges in the first place is answered by the fact that vaping is a much lower-cost alternative to cigarettes and many forms of cannabis. As vaping went downmarket, a race to the bottom was all but assured, and unscrupulous cartridge makers cut THC oils with substances that would produce no major changes in the immediate experience of taste, mouthfeel and so on. Vitamin E acetate was one of those substances.
There are few regulations on this sector of commerce and, frankly, even if there were, it would be trivial to avoid them. Besides, marijuana has a long history of existing outside of FDA approval. People are going to smoke whatever they want. But it seems clear now that there are plenty in the industry who have no problem putting others at risk of serious injury or death to sell more of their product.
It’s difficult to say which vape product providers were using vitamin E acetate, though it seems it was mostly THC cartridges on the low end, which make sense. There’s no need to dilute your product if people are already paying a healthy premium and you have a reputation as a high-end brand.
Exactly how testing and verification should be accomplished is a matter for the FDA, the vaping industry and individual shops, which may conduct their own checks to reassure customers. But the testing must be done — or else other unknown interactions or substances may still produce the sort of long-term health effects we are trying to avoid.
As Wu and O’Shea write:
The potential for unexpected chemistries to take place on individual components within a vape mixture is high. Educational programs to inform of the danger are now required, as public perception has grown that vaping is not harmful.
Until it’s been tested, it’s still a risk.
With a lot of people attempting to stay home as much as possible, there are a lot of folks who are in search of entertainment. For PC players, a good place to potentially turn is the Epic Games Store, which at the beginning of this year extended its weekly free games promotion through 2020. A new batch of free games … Continue reading
Netflix will temporarily lower its streaming quality in Europe, after concerns that the video service might be putting too much stress on broadband infrastructure. On-demand services have proved to be a welcome distraction for people forced to stay home during social distancing, in an attempt to curtail the community spread of coronavirus. At the same time, though, Netflix’s traffic has … Continue reading