Virtual Reality Helps to Treat Babies' Hearts 18
Roland Piquepaille writes "In Denmark, about 350 babies need to be operated each year because of heart defect. And their hearts are very small, so it's hard to know the exact kind of defect before the operation. This is why the Aarhus University Hospital is using virtual reality software to model babies' hearts, according to BBC News. Now, surgeons and doctors can visualize a magnified heart in 3D before planning cardiac surgery. This also allows a better communication with parents which can understand what's wrong with their babies before the intervention. As the percentage of affected babies, about one per cent, is probably the same in many other countries, let's hope this software will be widely distributed. Congratulations to these Danish doctors and software writers for this brilliant usage of technology. This summary contains more details and pictures."
Virtual Reality? (Score:2)
Re:Virtual Reality? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Virtual Reality? (Score:2, Funny)
Reading that.. (Score:2)
The end of evolution? (Score:1, Interesting)
Is this the end of survival of the fittest? These days, we have the technology to keep babies with heart defects alive, and they grow up and reproduce, and their genes become part of the gene pool. In the old days, the bad genes would die out and would be eliminated from the gene pool, thereby strengthening the human race.
This is yet more evidence that we're going to have to work a lot more on genetic engineering if we're going to advance as a species.
Re:The end of evolution? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The end of evolution? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The end of evolution? (Score:2)
Re:The end of evolution? (Score:2)
Re:The end of evolution? (Score:2)
Re:The end of evolution? (Score:2)
And I think you're right capitalist society is evolving to something more than capitalist.
Slashdot Blibvert (Score:5, Interesting)
Why does /. keep posting articles submitted by this guy? He has a shabby blog on radio.weblogs.com and does a poor job stealing other writers work; the site is a blatant commercial effort. Yet /. keeps putting Roland's stuff up and linking to it.
What's the deal? Is there some kind of commercial payola a la 1970's radio? Maybe the editor has a thing going with Roland, in a Clinton-McGreevy-esque way.
*Cringe* I didn't need any of those mental images.
http://slashdot.org/search.pl?tid=&query=roland+pi que&author=&sort=1&op=stories [slashdot.org]/
78 stories posted (with obligatory, self-promoting links) this year. That's about one every three days.
He even has the audacity to advertise [smartmobs.com] that most of his traffic comes from Slashdot!
"This blog, Roland Piquepaille's Technology Trends attracts about 150,000 visitors per month, of which 60% come from Slashdot"
Re:Slashdot Blibvert (Score:2)
Most Roland Piqesomething spams are posted by Michael.
Solve the problem by ignoring all articles posted by Michael. I already have any of Hemos' crap on ignore and it improved Slashdot!
Then again, if I were to ignore all incompetent Slashdot admins/editors, I'd be looking at the wquivalent of this [about]...
I saw this yesterday and it was pretty impressive (Score:4, Informative)
Re:I saw this yesterday and it was pretty impressi (Score:1)