Elon musk copied underground mail tunnels and renamed it as hyper loop-

Elon musk copied underground mail tunnels and renamed it as hyper loopImage result for riding in underground postal tunnels 1900

The Victorian Hyperloop: the forgotten pneumatic railway beneath ...

CityMetric
... an engineer who was one of the key players in the Victorian era's “railway mania”. They were going to build a new kind of underground railway.



Postal Museum, London: What it's like to ride London's hidden ...

www.traveller.com.au › Europe › England › London
Nov 7, 2017 - For almost a century this underground railway was the main means of communication for millions of people living in and around London. Considered to be the social network of the 1900s, the underground Mail Rail was the equivalent of email and Facebook, connecting millions of Londoners daily via posta

Underground Mail Road; Modern Plans for All-but-Forgotten Delivery ...

www.nytimes.com/.../underground-mail-road-modern-plans-for-all-but-forgotten-deli...
May 7, 2001 - In the bowels of New York City a century ago, not only was there the whoosh of water through pipes and the whiz of subways through tunnels, there was ... In describing the system's effectiveness during a snowstorm, a 1914 congressional report of the Pneumatic Tube Postal Commission said: ''New York ...



Postal Museum, London: What it's like to ride London's hidden underground railway



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  • Twenty-one metres below the streets of London, there is a vast, sophisticated network of railway tunnels that stretches more than 10 kilometres.
    For almost a century this underground railway was the main means of communication for millions of people living in and around London. Considered to be the social network of the 1900s, the underground Mail Rail was the equivalent of email and Facebook, connecting millions of Londoners daily via postal mail.
    Unbeknown to many Londoners, the complex network of Mail Rail, which operated from the 1920s until 2003, exists beneath today's London underground. At its peak, the railway ran for 10.4 kilometres from Paddington to Whitechapel and was made up of six sorting offices with a mainline railway station. Running 22 hours a day, the railway transported on average 4 million letters a day across the capital from post box to the delivery address and it employed 220 staff.
    Visitors to central London's Postal Museum, which opened in late July this year, can ride on one of the railway's driverless trains, a replica of the historic trains that used to travel the railway. London's Mail Rail was the world's first railway serviced by driverless electric trains. Its introduction was hailed as a significant technological and communication innovation for a city that was suffering serious delays in postage delivery because of traffic congestion on London's streets. In those days, the postal service operated twice daily, which meant that if you sent mail in the morning, you could expect a reply by the afternoon. The frequency may seem like "snail-mail" by today's email standards, but its purpose and relevance as London's key method of communication, business or personal, reveals the enormity and scale of Mail Rail's operations.
    A round-trip on the Mail Rail train, which started running in early September, takes about 15 minutes and begins at what used to be the Mount Pleasant depot. Each passenger gets a train car to themselves; it's a rather compact space but big enough for one person. My train is red and looks rather like a Lego toy. The train slowly pulls out of the platform; picking up speed as it meanders around corners in the low light  and makes short stops along the way. The ride includes montages and a story describes the railway's working life, from its 1930s heydays to World War II, as well as giving personal anecdotes from people who worked on the railway.
    The museum also features several exhibitions at the same location. At the Mail Rail exhibition retired trains and large rail equipment that was used to build and maintain the railway are on display. The exhibition takes a closer look at the engineering feats behind the inception and legacy of the railway. The Postal Service exhibition features modern stamp designs, including Penny Blacks, the world's first adhesive postage stamps, a selection of retro posters and magazines from the 1950s and 60s, and post buses that were used to deliver mail to remote or rural areas.



    Mail Rail: London's best new train line | Ars Technica

    https://arstechnica.com/cars/2017/07/london-mail-rail-postal-museum/
    Jul 28, 2017 - The Mail Rail's most recent rolling stock was built way back in 1980; it didn't have any seats, nor was it really rated for human transportation through some rather rough-looking tunnels. So, the Postal Museum—the charity that now operates the railway—commissioned some brand-new trains from Severn ...


    Image result for riding in underground postal tunnels 1900

    The Victorian Hyperloop: the forgotten pneumatic railway beneath ...

    CityMetric
    ... an engineer who was one of the key players in the Victorian era's “railway mania”. They were going to build a new kind of underground railway.

    The Victorian Hyperloop: the forgotten pneumatic railway beneath the streets of London

    An engraving of a similar system at Crystal Palace in 1864. Image: Wikimedia Commons.
    Since the opening of the first underground railway in London over 150 years ago, we’ve settled on a mix of different ways for moving people through cities: train, tram, bus, car, bike, bus, foot. Over the years, though, major cities could afford to experiment with some pretty far-out technologies.
    So it is with the London Pneumatic Despatch Railway (LPDR), a Futurama-ish tube that carried parcels and people beneath the capital in the 1860s.
    I first stumbled across the LPDR when reading up about pneumatic tubes after Elon Musk announced his Hyperloop idea. If you missed it, he wants to send people in capsules through a 570km-long pneumatic low-pressure tube from Los Angeles to San Francisco at speeds of up to 962km/h (yeah, really).
    I read that, then saw this:
    Image: Royal Mail Group Ltd. 2013, courtesy British Postal Museum & Archive.
    That's a party of Victorians gathered around a pneumatic despatch tube”, and they look like they're going to send those two men through it in a carriage. What the hell was this thing?
    To find out, I asked Julian Stray, the senior curator of the British Postal Museum & Archive (BPMA). The story begins in the middle of the 19th century, at the height of the British Empire. And it’s all about mail.
    “The General Post Office (GPO) was the routing hub of the whole country,” Stray explains. “You would have had the foreign mails, the inland mails, the country mails, the mails to the provinces. Speed is everything. A loss of two minutes required a written explanation to one of the directors or the Postmaster General.”
    The bandwidth of this system was throttled by the narrow streets between the stations on London’s edge, and the GPO sorting office in the middle near St Paul's Cathedral – horse and carriage traffic jams could have Empire-wide knock-on effects. And, in an example of what Stray calls “that Victorian endeavour, that willingness to have a go regardless of the cost of failure”, some canny entrepreneurs spotted a business opportunity.
    A group of men came together to form the Pneumatic Despatch Company. Its board was headed by the 3rd Duke of Buckingham, a close friend of Disraeli’s. Also involved were bookstore magnate WH Smith (yes, that WH Smith), and Thomas Brassey, an engineer who was one of the key players in the Victorian era’s “railway mania”. They were going to build a new kind of underground railway.
    Image: Royal Mail Group Ltd. 2013, courtesy BPMA.
    In the summer of 1861, Thames steamship passengers floating past Battersea Pier would have seen a curious experiment laid out on the river bank: 411m of cast-iron tunnel, 80cm tall and a little bit narrower than that wide, with carriages disappearing into one end and reappearing at the other. It was a pneumatic tube, big enough for bags of mail and people. Grinning lads would climb into the carriages, lie under a blanket, and get fired along the tube at speeds up to 30mph.
    Pneumatic tubes are still around today, in places like hospitals and banks. Most major cities in Europe and North America had their own pneumatic telegraph networks in the latter half of the 19th century, before the electrical telegraph took over though some networks lasted for decades beyond then. François Truffaut’s 1969 film Baisers Volés features a scene with a character sending a letter via Paris’ still-operational pneumatic telegraph:
    The modern pneumatic capsule system was invented by engineer William Murdoch in the 1830s. These were tubes of a few inches in diameter, designed to carry small, light items, like letters. Powered by a steam engine, they worked on the principle of suck or blow (and that's not how Musk's Hyperloop would work, by the way, which achieves its high speeds by sucking the air out of the tube so there's minimal air resistance for capsules riding on rails). It's a simple system, and inevitably some engineers in the mid-19th century wanted to scale it up to something big enough to carry people.
    The most famous of these is probably Alfred Beach, whose 1870 Beach Pneumatic Transit was the first subway line in New York City (and which might be most famous now for its brief cameo in Ghostbusters). A tube-shaped train that could carry 22 people sat flush within a 2.4m-wide tunnel, blown along a 95m test track beneath Broadway. It was a popular tourist attraction at the time, but Beach failed to get investors interested in backing him in extending it into a proper underground railway (and a stock market crash in 1873 didn’t help either).
    There was a similar demonstration railway built in 1864 in Crystal Palace for the Great Exhibition, and there were some other experimental pneumatic trains in places like Devon, Dublin and Croydon, but there was never a full run at the idea that lasted very long. Pneumatic tubes are incredibly expensive to maintain when scaled up to the size of normal trains.
    Of all the pneumatic railways, though, the LPDR is the oldest it’s actually the second-oldest underground railroad in the world, opening only a year after the first Paddington-Farringdon line of the Underground and the longest-lasting of them all. “As a system it was fantastic,” Stray says. “But it was a failure.”
    The LPDR was built in two parts. The first, in 1863, was a single tunnel (the same size as the test one at Battersea) running from beneath platform one of Euston station to the Eversholt Street sorting office, a third of a mile away. But the second part, built between 1863 and 1866, was the main project: two tunnels, 2.8km from Eversholt Street to Holborn and 1.5km from Holborn to the main GPO office near St Paul’s. Let’s map it:
    The reason it takes a long dog-leg detour down Tottenham Court Road is that the Duke of Bedford, who owned most of the land between Euston and Holborn, refused the Pneumatic Despatch Company permission to mine its tunnels underneath. It was a bigger tunnel than before, too 1.5m wide running just beneath the road surface.
    “It is phenomenal,” says Stray. “They had 21-foot-wide centrifugal fans at first powered by so-called ‘Cornish engines’, but they kept on handling it with bigger and bigger engines. It was some weight being transported in these things. Two of the carriages would be carrying about 12 tonnes, journeying at up to 30mph.” That's not bad it was more than twice as fast as the 12mph trains on the Paddington-Farringdon line.
    When it opened, the great and the good of London’s political and business class turned out at Holborn station to watch the first bags arriving from Euston – and to have a ride on it themselves.
    “People would travel on it, clutching a tallow candle on their chest. It was the Alton Towers of its time. Occasionally as they came near the road surface they could hear the clatter of horse’s hooves on the cobble stones. It would dip down under Holborn, occasionally as it went low there would be a splash of water and a smell of rust, and they could tell where they were. There was a lovely report of a lady who was shot the entire length of the system, ‘who emerged virtually unscathed, crinoline and all’.” Visitors to London, including the son of Napoleon III, gave the LPDR a try.
    Yet despite proving a smash hit as a novelty, the LPDR proved rubbish at what it needed to do most of all transport mail. The stations at each end were in basements, and once you factored in the time it took to lug the heavy sacks up and down staircases at either end there wasn’t any kind of time saving compared to the horse and carriage. This became a bigger problem when times began to slip beyond nine minutes for each leg.
    It slipped down to about 17 to 20 minutes [from] loss of gas, loss of pressure, Stray explained. Occasionally there would be complete breakdowns where someone would have to crawl into the tube with a length of rope, tie it around the carriages and draw them out. Also there was an ingress of water, and occasionally wet bags, and the last thing you wanted was damaged mail.”
    There was also political opposition to the LPDR from within the GPO, which had been forced into paying for this expensive experiment by Parliament. They were probably looking for a reason for it not to work that’s my suspicion, Stray said. Business dried up. In October 1874, the last train left for the GPO, and it closed for good after soaking up £200,000 in costs – that's £1.9m in today's money. They really only had a decade of use.
    Perhaps the most surprising thing about the LPDR is how quickly it faded from memory. Transport blogger Ian Mansfield found an article from the Windsor Magazine in 1900 detailing the rediscovery of "London's lost tunnel", which is amazing for something that was barely a quarter-century old at the time.
    By the 1920s, when the Post Office realised it could use its old pneumatic railway tunnels for laying down telephone wire, it had the problem that it had no idea where the tunnels actually were and, when it got down there, it found that sections had been destroyed by newer construction projects, or used by companies illegally for storing things like lumber. Gas had a tendency to build-up in the city's sewers at the time, causing pavement explosions, but in 1928 a gas build-up in the old LPDR tunnel near the junction of High Holborn and Kingsway caused one of the most serious of the era (known at the time as Holborn Explosion).
    It lifted the ground for hundreds of metres in each direction, said Stray. It blew in shop fronts. There were flames that were 30 feet high in the air, that burned for hours on end. Below ground, where a lot of premises had cellar space, the walls were blown in a few inches. One man was killed, and thousands of pounds of damage was recorded.
    All we have left of the LPDR are two of the carriages from the small tunnel between Eversholt Street and Euston. They were found in 1930 during construction work at Euston, and are currently kept at the British Postal Museum & Archive in Debden. The rest of the tunnels those not destroyed by more modern construction works are probably caved in, filled with rubble, or otherwise lost.
    Here's Rammell's 1958 map of where he thought the LPDR would eventually run:
    Image: Royal Mail Group Ltd. 2013, courtesy BPMA.
    The hope was that key government buildings like the Houses of Parliament, India House, Custom House, the Tower of London, the Royal Mint, and the Bank of England – would all be linked up. In the end, a traditional railway built in 1927 the Mail Rail pulled off much of what Rammell dreamed of, linking Paddington to Whitechapel via several of Royal Mail's key London offices.
    Mail Rail closed in 2003, becoming a thing of legend among the capital's urban exploration community (and only finally conquered by explorers in 2011). The BPMA is currently trying to raise funds to build a new Mail Rail museum and offer tours of certain closed sections, and from 2019 it hopes to offer rides on a replica train through a kilometre of the tunnels. Unlike the LPDR this piece of London history hopefully shouldn't be lost to memory.
    Yet we should wonder about what might have been had the technology for the LPDR been a little bit more reliable, or its backers willing to lose a little bit more money. This was ambition, said Stray. This was 'railmania', a time when the supplements to things like the Times would carry a thousand proposals like this. People lost many millions of pounds. There is little surviving of this, little surviving headed notepaper, there’s no signage or anything like that. But there are the stories.
    Ian Steadman is the editor of How We Get To Next. This article was originally published on our sister site the New Statesman in 2013, when Ian was its tech writer.
    Want more of this stuff? Follow CityMetric on Twitter or Facebook.

    Michio Kaku unravels the mysterious looks of aliens Image result for Michio Kaku 
    and what will when they meet humansImage result for Michio Kaku

    comment

    Michio Kaku looks like one

    ============================================


    Flu comes from outer space, claim scientists | Science | The Guardian

    https://www.theguardian.com/science/2000/jan/.../spaceexploration.medicineandhealth
    Jan 18, 2000 - But the flu may have worse in store, according to scientists who claim to have ... an alarming explanation for the epidemic - a virus from outer space. ... high in the atmosphere by passing comets being forced down to earth by ...

    Space might be teeming with viruses that we're not looking for, but we ...

    https://www.zmescience.com/science/astrovirology-paper-alien-life/
    Jan 23, 2018 - Maybe, then, we should down-grade again and start looking for aliens that ... 'Simple life survives in space,' granted, is a phrase that sounds ...

    The Craziest Scientific Theory About What Causes Flu Pandemics

    https://io9.gizmodo.com/do-flu-viruses-originate-in-outer-space-1594561609
    Jun 23, 2014 - ... some scientists concluded that flu viruses came from outer space. ... "A wave of influenza comes up unexpectedly from a particular point of .

    Viruses floating in outer space could give experts the clues to finding ...

    https://www.thesun.co.uk/tech/5385172/viruses-could-prove-aliens-exist/
    Jan 20, 2018 - VIRUSES floating in outer space could hold the key to finding alien ... Woman exposes breast on Google Maps – racking up hundreds of ...

    comment:-

    look  around

     find alien virus
    find aliens among us 


    for example 
     

    Aliens Among Us

    Do we share Earth with alternative life forms?

    By Carl Zimmer|Wednesday, June 27, 2007
    Every living thing on Earth shares a long, colorful history. Our planet was born into a maelstrom 4.5 billion years ago, and for the next 600 million years a steady bombardment of primordial debris made the surface uninhabitable. The blitz finally tapered off 3.8 billion years ago. Then within about 50 million years later—practically an instant in geologic time—life irrevocably established itself. Since then, it has evolved into everything from bacteria to toadstools to mudskippers to humans. Outwardly these species vary wildly, but at the molecular level they are staggeringly uniform. They all use DNA to encode genetic information. They all use RNA molecules as messengers to transfer the information from DNA to cellular factories called ribosomes, which then build proteins, which in turn drive our metabolisms and form the structures of our cells. In short, every species seems descended from a common ancestor whose attributes define what scientists mean when they say “life as we know it.”
    Chaos_diffluens
    Alternative life could look similar to regular microbes but with different biochemistry.
    Image courtesy of Dr. Ralf Wagner, released under GNU FDL
    But what about life as we don’t know it? What if other, completely distinct forms of biology also took root on the early Earth? After all, the swiftness with which life appeared might mean that it could easily do so anytime, anywhere the conditions are right. If so, maybe life arose more than once at different locations on the early Earth. Those other organisms might have their own biochemistry and a separate evolutionary history. They might not even use DNA—they could be, in essence, alien beings that just happened to emerge on the same planet. Which leads to the big question: What if one (or more) of those alternative forms of life is still around?
    “It could be right under our noses, or even in our noses,” says Paul Davies, the director of BEYOND: The Center for Fundamental Concepts in Science at Arizona State University.
    At first, the idea of alternative life on Earth may sound absurd. Even if life could have begun more than once, it is generally thought that our DNA-based ancestors drove any competitors to extinction, handily explaining away the absence of non-DNA life-forms in the catalogs of biological science.
    That is probably why little research has been done in the area, yet Davies and a few other scientists suspect a different reason for that absence: Their colleagues are just not looking hard?
    enough. The common assumption is that DNA triumphed because “our form of life is seemingly so superior that we would have eaten” all other life-forms, says Steven Benner of the Foundation for Applied Molecular Evolution in Gainesville, Florida. “That’s the sum total of the argument. But that’s just anthropocentric. These sorts of ‘we’re at the center of the universe’ arguments have always failed.” When Davies first started quizzing other scientists about alternative life a few years ago, he remembers their eyes widening as they asked, “Why hadn’t we thought of this?”
    Benner believes there may be some organisms hiding on Earth today that are based not on DNA and proteins but on a more primitive type of biochemistry. A number of researchers now theorize that DNA-based life evolved from an RNA-based predecessor. RNA is an unusual molecule that can both store genetic information and act like an enzyme, cutting apart other molecules or putting them together. Benner is convinced that 4 billion years ago, Earth was home to simple RNA-based organisms that could find food, grow, reproduce, and even evolve. Over time, some of these developed the ability to build proteins and switched to double-stranded DNA to carry their genes.
    Much of the evidence for this so-called RNA world lies in our own cells. RNA still carries out many different tasks beyond carrying messages from DNA. Benner and his colleagues are also trying to test their ideas by building artificial RNA-based organisms from scratch. The best evidence of the RNA world, though, would be finding natural RNA-based life that is still lurking on Earth today. “I can’t think of a good reason that some branch of the RNA world did not survive,” Benner says.


    Are octopuses aliens from outer space that were brought to Earth by ...

    https://www.independent.co.uk › News › Science
    May 18, 2018 - Octopuses are aliens. That's the claim being made by a team of 33 researchers published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal. They are not ...
    May 18, 2018 - Octopuses seem to be particularly prone to alien theories. A new paper proposes—based on an old theory—that octopuses might have cosmic ...

    FACT CHECK: Does Octopus DNA Come from Space? - Snopes.com

    https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/octopus-dna-origins/
    Claim: Researchers have discovered that octopus genomes contain alien DNA.
    Claimed by: Internet

    "Alien" octopuses "arrived on Earth from space as cryopreserved eggs ...

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    May 14, 2018 - OCTOPUSES are “aliens” which evolved on another planet before arriving on Earth hundreds of millions of years ago as “cryopreserved” eggs ...

    Octopuses and panspermia: Is life on Earth from alien DNA?

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    May 17, 2018 - OCTOPUSES are weird. This is not just because they look odd. It's not because they're disturbingly smart. And that could mean they're alien.

    Is The Octopus An Alien? | Mach | NBC News - YouTube

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    May 22, 2018 - Uploaded by NBC News
    The octopus certainly does look strange, with bugged-out eyes, suction-cup tentacles, and the ability to change ...

    No, Octopuses Don't Come From Outer Space - Live Science

    https://www.livescience.com › Animals
    May 17, 2018 - Like Fox Mulder, I want to believe. I want to believe the conclusions of a new paper that says octopuses are actually space aliens whose frozen ...

    Is the octopus an alien? - NBC News

    https://www.nbcnews.com/.../is-the-octopus-an-alien-123943635597...
    May 22, 2018
    The octopus certainly does look strange, with bugged-out eyes, suction-cup ... journal posits that octopuses ...

    Are octopuses aliens? Bizarre new theory suggests the sea creatures ...

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    May 18, 2018 - THEY sure look strange, but could octopuses be extraterrestrials? 33 Scientists think so. From editing their genes to guessing footy results, the ...


    Octopussy - Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octopussy
    Octopussy is a 1983 British spy film, the thirteenth in the James Bond series produced by Eon Productions, and the sixth to star Roger Moore as the fictional MI6 ...
    Based on‎: ‎James Bond‎; by ‎Ian Fleming
    Country‎: ‎United Kingdom
    Box office‎: ‎$187.5 million
    Production company‎: ‎Eon Productions

    Octopussy (1983) - IMDb

    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0086034/
    Rating: 6.6/10 - ‎82,400 votes
    Action .... Roger Moore and Luisa Mattioli at an event for Octopussy (1983) Octopussy (1983) Roger Moore in Octopussy (1983) Roger Moore and Tom Selleck at an event ...

    Octopussy (1983) - Full Cast & Crew - IMDb

    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0086034/fullcredits
    Octopussy (1983) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

    Octopussy Trailer (HD) - YouTube

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IwHbCvXMbS8
    Apr 5, 2010 - Uploaded by Chigawa
    It's a boring time to be a bond fan right now, here's a little something to tide you all over till Bond 23 rolls ...







    Augmented reality technology helps surgeons see through the body ...

    https://usa-sciencenews.com/.../augmented-reality-technology-helps-surgeons-see-thro...
    1 day ago - Chest pain: New tool helps doctors decide when tests are needed A two year follow-up on a study involving more than 10,000 people with stable chest pain finds that an online tool can accurately predict which patients are likely to have normal non-invasive tests and remain free of cardiac events. The…
     
     

    Augmented reality technology helps surgeons see through the body

    Augmented reality headsets can help doctors 'see through' organs and tissues in the operating theatre, and improve the outcome of reconstructive surgery for patients, a study has found.

    By: | London | Published: February 4, 2018 5:13 PM
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    augmented reality, reconstructive surgery, reconstructive lower limb surgery, lower limb surgery, organs, tissues, augmented reality technology Augmented reality headsets can help doctors ‘see through’ organs and tissues in the operating theatre, and improve the outcome of reconstructive surgery for patients. (Image: Reuters)
    Augmented reality headsets can help doctors ‘see through’ organs and tissues in the operating theatre, and improve the outcome of reconstructive surgery for patients, a study has found. In a series of procedures carried out by a team from the Imperial College London in the UK, researchers showed that for the first time how surgeons can use augmented reality headsets while operating on patients undergoing reconstructive lower limb surgery. Researchers used Microsoft HoloLens – a computer headset that immerses the wearer in ‘mixed reality’, enabling them to interact with holograms or computer-generated objects made visible through the visor. The team used the technology to overlay images of CT scans – including the position of bones and key blood vessels – onto each patient’s leg, in effect enabling the surgeon to ‘see through’ the limb during surgery. According to the team trialling the technology, the approach can help surgeons locate and reconnect key blood vessels during reconstructive surgery, which could improve outcomes for patients.
    “We are one of the first groups in the world to use the HoloLens successfully in the operating theatre,” said Philip Pratt, a research fellow at Imperial College London. “Through this initial series of patient cases we have shown that the technology is practical, and that it can provide a benefit to the surgical team,” said Pratt, lead author of the study published in the journal European Radiology Experimental.
    “With the HoloLens, you look at the leg and essentially see inside of it. You see the bones, the course of the blood vessels, and can identify exactly where the targets are located,” said Pratt. Following a car accident or severe trauma, patients may have tissue damage or open wounds that require reconstructive surgery using fasciocutaneous flaps. These flaps of tissue, which are taken from elsewhere on the body and include the skin and blood vessels, are used to cover the wound and enable it to close and heal properly.
    A vital step in the process is connecting the blood vessels of the ‘new’ tissue with those at the site of the wound, so oxygenated blood can reach the new tissue and keep it alive. The standard approach for this element of reconstructive surgery has been the use of a handheld scanner which uses ultrasound to identify blood vessels under the skin by detecting the movement of blood pulsing through them, enabling the surgeon to approximate where the vessels are and their course through the tissue.
    “Augmented reality offers a new way to find these blood vessels under the skin accurately and quickly by overlaying scan images onto the patient during the operation,” said Pratt. In the procedures used to trial the technology, five patients requiring reconstructive surgery on their legs underwent CT scans to map the structure of the limb, including the position of bones and the location and course of blood vessels.
    Images from the scans were then segmented into bone, muscle, fatty tissue and blood vessels and loaded into intermediary software to create 3D models of the leg. These models were then fed into specially designed software that renders the images for the headset, which in turn overlays the model onto what the surgeon can see in the operating theatre. Clinical staff are able to manipulate these AR images through hand gestures to make any fine adjustments and correctly line up the model with surgical landmarks on the patient’s limbs, such as the knee joint or ankle bone.
     

    Augmented Reality In Healthcare Will Be Revolutionary - The Medical ...

    medicalfuturist.com/augmented-reality-in-healthcare-will-be-revolutionary/
    All kinds of thoughts would rush through your head, and no matter whether you would think of calling an ambulance, a doctor or your mom for help, you would ... AccuVein uses augmented reality by using a handheld scanner that projects over skin and shows nurses and doctors where veins are in the patients' bodies.

    Augmented Reality In Healthcare Will Be Revolutionary

    Augmented reality is one of the most promising digital technologies at present – look at the success of Pokémon Go – and it has the potential to change healthcare and everyday medicine completely for physicians and patients alike.

    By now, it is official: Pokémon Go conquered the world. TechCrunch reported that on the day when the game was launched, it immediately surpassed the daily time usage of Facebook, SnapChat or Twitter by the average iOS user on mobile phones. Tom Curry, a man living in New Zealand quit his job to become a full-time Pokémon hunter. In Central Park, herds of Pokémon Go players almost caused a stampede as they tried to capture a rare type of the imagined animal.
    Pokémon Go - Augmented Reality in Healthcare
    Rafael Grossmann, the first surgeon who performed an operation with the help of Google Glass, told me that Pokémon Go represents the ultimate gamification of an “activity” app, and that he does not think the inventors of the game such as Nintendo expected nor planned this effect in people.

    So why is the game so popular and what does it have to do with the future of medicine?

    The response is augmented reality (AR) and the rising interest of people in its use. Pokémon Go is made with exactly this technology: the device (in this case your phone) transmits a live or indirect view of a physical, real-world environment which is augmented by computer-generated sensory input such as sound, video, graphics or GPS data. In the future, augmented reality could be a built-in feature in a glass, headset or digital contact lens.
    Augmented reality differs from its most known “relative”, virtual reality (VR) since the latter creates a 3D world completely detaching the user from reality. There are two respects in which AR is unique: users do not lose touch with reality and it puts information into eyesight as fast as possible. These distinctive features enable AR to become a driving force in the future of medicine.
    At the moment, there are certain hindrances to overcome but Grossmann thinks that AR and VR will be very common in healthcare within the next 3-5 years. According to Grossmann, the biggest obstacles are related to education, cultural change and acceptance, but the technical obstacles are absolutely temporal and not an issue at all, and cost-related barriers will also disappear in the future.

    So, let me show you the best examples of augmented reality in medicine.

    1) Augmented reality can save lives through showing defibrillators nearby


    What would youAED4EU - Augmented Reality in Medicine do if a person next to you collapsed suddenly? All kinds of thoughts would rush through your head, and no matter whether you would think of calling an ambulance, a doctor or your mom for help, you would definitely reach for your phone.
    And I suggest you to consider downloading the Layar reality browser combined with AED4EU app to your phone next to the basic emergency numbers so the next time you get into a similar situation, you will be able to help more.
    AED4EU was created by Lucien Engelen from the Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, The Netherlands. Its users can add places where automated external defibrillators or AEDs are located and this database can be accessed through this new application. Moreover, with the Layar browser, you can project the exact location of the nearest AEDs on the screen of your phone and it would take a minute to find them and help those in need. So augmented reality brings crucial pieces of information to those in need or danger.

    2) Google Glass might help new mothers struggling with breastfeeding


    It is a matter of fact that Google Glass has the potential to revolutionize healthcare, but to be honest I would have never thought of the possibility of helping new mothers with breastfeeding through this technology.
    In 2014, the Melbourne office of an innovation company called Small World conducted a Google Glass trial with the Australian Breastfeeding Association that effectively allowed their telephone counsellors to see through the eyes of mothers while they breastfed at home. Through such a way struggling mothers could get expert help at any time of the day and they did not even have to put down the baby from their arms. By sharing the patient’s perspective, consultations get to a new level.
    Google Glass - Augmented Reality in Medicine

    3) Patients can describe their symptoms better through augmented reality

    Patients often struggle when they have to describe their symptoms to their doctors accurately. In other cases, people often find themselves overreacting a medical situation or on the contrary, belittle the problem. In ophthalmology, augmented reality might be the answer for patient education.
    EyeDecide is one of its kind medical app, which uses the camera display for simulating the impact of specific conditions on a person’s vision. Using apps like EyeDecide, doctors can show simulation of the vision of a patient suffering from a specific condition. For instance, the app can demonstrate the impact of Cataract or AMD and thus helping patients understand their symptoms and their actual medical state. If patients can experience the long-term effects of their lifestyle on their health, it could motivate people to make positive changes.
    EyeDecide - Augmented Reality in Medicine

    4) Nurses can find veins easier with augmented reality 

    The start-up company AccuVein is using AR technology to make both nurses’ and patients’ lives easier. AccuVein’s marketing specialist, Vinny Luciano said 40% of IVs (intravenous injections) miss the vein on the first stick, with the numbers getting worse for children and the elderly. AccuVein uses augmented reality by using a handheld scanner that projects over skin and shows nurses and doctors where veins are in the patients’ bodies. Luciano estimates that it’s been used on more than 10 million patients, making finding a vein on the first stick 3.5x more likely. Such technologies could assist healthcare professionals and extend their skills.

    5) Motivating runners through zombies

    Imagine that you are walking through a dark and abandoned alley, and you suddenly hear the groaning and the slow movement of a strange creature. I am pretty sure that even the laziest person would speed up after realizing that a “real zombie” is after him. This is the basic idea behind the Zombies, Run! application.
    The game monopolizes on the fact that fear can motivate people and the fact that everything seems to be more fun when turned into a game. This app is perfect for those who consider running a boring activity. If you not only hear but also see virtual zombies projected onto your phone or device’s screen, you will not only increase your speed and endurance, but also feel that time is just flying by.

    6) Pharma companies can provide more innovative drug information

    Have you ever been curious about how a drug works in your body? Even if you got interested in discovering how the distant world of pills and medicaments work, I bet you lost all your enthusiasm after you read the boring and undecipherable drug description. Now, augmented reality is here to change it.
    With the help of AR, patients can see how the drug works in 3D in front of their eyes instead of just reading long descriptions on the bottle. Lab workers could monitor their experiments with augmented reality equipment. In factories, workers could start working without hands on trainings as the device would tell them what to do, and how to do it.

    7) Augmented reality can assist surgeons in the OR

    Doctors and even patients are aware of the fact that when it comes to surgery, precision is of prime importance. Now, AR can help surgeons become more efficient at surgeries. Whether they are conducting a minimally invasive procedure or locating a tumor in liver, AR healthcare apps can help save lives and treat patients seamlessly.
    Medsights Tech developed a software to test the feasibility of using augmented reality to create accurate 3-dimensional reconstructions of tumors. The complex image reconstructing technology basically empowers surgeons with x-ray views – without any radiation exposure, in real time.
     The earlier mentioned Grossmann, who was part of the team performing the first live operation using medical VR, told me that HoloAnatomy, which is using HoloLens to display real data-anatomical models, is a wonderful and rather intuitive use of AR having obvious advantages over traditional methods.

    8) Google’s digital contact lens can transform how we look at the world

    The age of digital contact lenses and retinal implants are upon us and they have great potential in transforming healthcare. Retinal implants might give vision back to those who lost it or grant humans supervision augmenting what we can do. Digital contact lenses could transform both how we look at the world while also revolutionizing diabetes care. Google aims to produce digital, multi-sensor contact lens which will be able to measure blood sugar levels. On the other hand, diabetes care constitutes rather a side feature, while more importantly digital contact lenses will be able to augment reality – for example to turn the page of an e-book by blinking an eye.
     Google Contact Lenses - Augmented Reality in Healthcare
    Although current devices such as Microsoft Hololens are far from the “perfect” experience, but there is no reason to believe that we will not get there soon. Thus, the most effective way to get used to this future trend, if we start to educate ourselves and our children.
    Do you remember which your favorite toy as a kid was? For example, I always had a passion for LEGO. Assembling little LEGO-parts into something new, creating castles, cars, complex cities – that is one of the best activities in the world. It stimulates your fantasy, your creativity, develops your skills for holistic vision as well as your attention to detail. Lately, there are various videogames which attempt to recreate LEGO in the virtual space – such as Minecraft.
    Parents often complain that their kids are just sitting in from of some screens not learning anything about their environment and themselves, but I do not agree. Minecraft also enhances creativity, develops the way children see the world around them – but in a different way as LEGO. I think that from here, it is only one leap before we reach LEGO with AR where the advantages of building something in the real world might be combined with virtual imagination. This way, our kids would be able to know what real is real, but would also be ready to exploit the opportunities AR can provide us with.
    I think it would be a great way to get accustomed to the future since I do believe augmented reality is the future. If you still do not believe me, just look at those people chasing Pokémons on the streets.