Mar 01

Sharing to read later.

Sharing to read later.

Originally shared by Adafruit Industries

Print your own body parts: Inside the promising world of 3D-printed prosthetics #WearableWednesday

https://blog.adafruit.com/2017/03/01/print-your-own-body-parts-inside-the-promising-world-of-3d-printed-prosthetics-wearablewednesday/

Quartz has a great piece on 3D printing, wearables and prosthetics

…Stories of lives devastated by conflict or disease are all too common across low-income countries. Lack of an arm or leg can be tough anywhere, but for people in poorer parts of the planet, with so much less support and more rickety infrastructure, it is especially challenging. Some are victims of conflict, others were born with congenital conditions. Many more are injured on roads, the casualty toll soaring in low-income nations even as it plummets in wealthier ones. Every minute, 20 people are seriously injured worldwide in road crashes. In Kenya, half the patients on surgical wards have road injuries.

The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates there are about 30 million people like Nhial and Lam who require prosthetic limbs, braces or other mobility devices. These can be simple to make and inexpensive. As one veteran prosthetist told me, his specialism is among the most instantly gratifying areas of medicine. “A patient comes in on Monday on crutches that leave them unable to carry anything. By Wednesday they are walking on a new leg and on Friday they leave with their life transformed.”

Yet more than eight in ten of those people needing mobility devices do not have them. They take a lot of work and expertise to produce and fit, and the WHO says there is a shortage of 40,000 trained prosthetists in poorer countries. There is also the time and cost to patients, who may have to travel long distances for treatment that can take five days—to assess need, produce a prosthesis and fit it to the residual limb. The result is that unglamorous items such as braces and artificial limbs are among the most-needed devices to assist lives. Yet, as in so many other areas, technology may be hurtling to the rescue, this time in the shape of 3D printing.

Read more

https://blog.adafruit.com/2017/03/01/print-your-own-body-parts-inside-the-promising-world-of-3d-printed-prosthetics-wearablewednesday/

Mar 01

This is worthy of a lot of pondering.

This is worthy of a lot of pondering.

Originally shared by Yonatan Zunger

This is a very well-distilled explanation of an important point: the culture of a company (or of a group of friends, or of a city, or of a country) isn’t captured by asking people what the culture is, but by asking “what do you need to know to get ahead.”

That’s not meant as a motivational statement: it’s meant as a tool for understanding your group. The things which actually get someone ahead or hold them back, things which can be very ugly to look at sometimes, are the things which the society rewards and punishes. And as anyone who’s ever run a team knows, you get what you incentivize; your incentives are your culture, and when they don’t align with your high-flown statements, that just means that your statements are wrong.

The exercise the author presents at the end is quite a valuable one.

https://jocelyngoldfein.com/culture-is-the-behavior-you-reward-and-punish-7e8e75c6543e