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Send us a textAt the last Pathology Visions 2024, I sat down with Imogen Fitt of Signify Research and Nick Best from Pathology News for a candid, energetic recap of what's really shaping the future of digital pathology.We discuss how two pathologists drove digital pathology adoption in their lab, the reality behind radiology partnerships, the cautionary tale of AI burnout, and how the Technology Buyer's Guide helps pathologists navigate endless scanner options. From standardization and DICOM to staffing crises, remote workflows, and even Meta glasses—we covered it all.
Send us a text“It used to take 40 minutes, now it takes 15” - this is what Dr. Alae Kawam said about her AI-powered prostate biopsy evaluation workflow. In this energizing episode of the Digital Pathology Podcast recorded at PathVisions 2024, Dr. Alae Kawam joins me to reflect on where pathology is headed—from AI-assisted prostate diagnostics to direct-to-digital imaging and beyond. Together, we unpack what's working, what still feels clunky, and why standardization, staffing flexibility, and smarter AI are critical to the next phase of pathology adoption.
How can healthcare organizations make the most of unstructured data like medical images, lab results, and clinical notes? In this interview, Jitesh Ghai, President & CEO at Hyland, discusses the company's innovative approach to extracting value from unstructured data and how their enterprise imaging SaaS solution is simplifying data sharing across systems.Discover how Hyland is using AI and open standards like DICOM and FHIR to support seamless integration and enhance efficiency. Plus, hear Ghai's vision for unifying clinical, financial, and operational data to improve patient care and drive smarter healthcare decisions.
SANS Internet Stormcenter Daily Network/Cyber Security and Information Security Stormcast
Massive Botnet Targets M365 with Password Spraying A large botnet is targeting service accounts in M365 with credentials stolen by infostealer malware. https://securityscorecard.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/MassiveBotnet-Report_022125_03.pdf Mixing up Public and Private Keys in OpenID The complex OpenID specificiation and the flexibility it supports enables careless administrators to publich private keys instead or in addition to public keys https://blog.hboeck.de/archives/909-Mixing-up-Public-and-Private-Keys-in-OpenID-Connect-deployments.html Healthcare Malware Hunt Part 1: Medial images are often encoded in the DICOM format, an image format unique to medical imaging. Patients looking for viewers for DICOM images are tricked into downloading malware. https://www.forescout.com/blog/healthcare-malware-hunt-part-1-silver-fox-apt-targets-philips-dicom-viewers/
Forecast = Healthcare and telecom under stormy skies—watch for cyber squalls and gusts of disinformation In this episode of Storm⚡️Watch, we dive into the world of cybersecurity with a focus on healthcare and telecommunications. We kick things off with a look at the current state of Internet of Healthcare Things (IoHT) exposures on public-facing networks. A recent study by Censys revealed some alarming findings about the security of DICOM servers, which are used for storing and transmitting medical images. With over 3,800 publicly exposed servers and data from 59 million patients at risk, it's clear that the healthcare industry needs to step up its cybersecurity game. We then shift gears to discuss a major cybersecurity incident involving Chinese hackers who managed to compromise wiretap systems of major U.S. telecom and internet providers. This breach is directly linked to the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA), a 30-year-old federal law that has long been criticized by security experts. The incident raises important questions about the balance between government surveillance needs and cybersecurity concerns. For those interested in staying up-to-date with the latest vulnerability intelligence, we highlight recent blog posts from VulnCheck, including their KEV Report and Initial Access Intelligence for September 2024. We also touch on GreyNoise's latest blog post about protecting democracy from the growing threat of deepfakes and disinformation. As always, we wrap up the episode with our "We Need to Talk About KEV" segment, where we discuss the latest additions to CISA's Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog. This roundup helps listeners stay informed about the most critical vulnerabilities that require immediate attention. Storm Watch Homepage >> Learn more about GreyNoise >>
Durante la tómbola judicial algunas pelotas numeradas cayeron al suelo Falla en uno de los servidores provocó caída de algunas páginas del Gobierno capitalino Kamala Harris goza de salud mental para ser Presidenta revela en informe médicoMás información en Nuestro Podcast
In this episode of SIIMcast, we sit down with a dynamic team of four students from Marquette University who took home the top prize at the SIIM Hackathon 2023. Join us as we chat with Paige Harrill, Alex Giblin, Davina Lettau, and Tom O'Sullivan about their journey from newcomers to champions in the field of medical imaging informatics. Each student shares their unique experiences—Paige's upcoming internship with GE Healthcare, Alex's podcasting endeavors, Davina's dual focus on engineering and law, and Tom's extensive background in data engineering. Listen in as they discuss their path to the Hackathon, the pivotal role of mentorship from industry veteran Terry Sippel Schmidt, and the challenges they faced in mastering complex concepts like FHIR and DICOM standards. Whether you're a student, professional, or just curious about the intersection of healthcare and technology, this episode offers valuable insights into the power of collaboration, mentorship, and seizing opportunities. Don't miss out on the chance to hear from the next generation of leaders in imaging informatics!
In this episode of the Unscripted Podcast, host Sarah Nicastro welcomes Andy Schneider, European Vice President of Services and Support at Canon EMEA, to share the company's five-pillar service strategy and why the relevance of service is near and dear to his heart. In his role, Andy's key focus is on driving growth and excellence in Canon's Digital Printing & Solutions unit by optimizing service delivery and leading cross-functional teams to consistently deliver outstanding results. Before that, Andy held senior roles at companies such as Spigraph, DICOM, Kofax, and more. If you enjoyed this episode, make sure to subscribe, rate, and review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and Google Podcasts. Also, subscribe to our newsletter right here: https://www.futureoffieldservice.com/the-insider
Discover the vulnerabilities of the DICOM protocol in healthcare and the significant risks it poses, including data breaches and manipulation. This deep dive covers practical solutions for protecting sensitive patient information and enhancing cybersecurity measures in medical systems. Join host Lieuwe Jan Koning with guests Jan van Boesschoten and Sina Yazdanmehr as they explore these critical issues and provide actionable advice for healthcare providers. Download the infographic here: https://threat-talks.com/deep-dive-dicom/
In this episode of Threat Talks, we examine major cybersecurity risks in healthcare. We discuss how old systems like DICOM, still widely used, can lead to serious cyberattacks. How do recent breaches and outdated protocols threaten patient privacy and disrupt healthcare services? Guided by Lieuwe Jan Koning, CTO of ON2IT, alongside cybersecurity experts Sina Yazdanmehr and Rob Maas, we explore the dangerous terrain of legacy systems, highlighting breaches involving HSE hospitals and vulnerabilities in ScreenConnect, and explaining how outdated protocols and software threaten patient privacy and disrupt healthcare services. Here is the link to Sina's DICOM talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CgJIxTP8ydQ&t=0s Download the infographic here: https://threat-talks.com/healthcare-responsibilities-regulations-and-legacies/
In this episode of The Manufacturing IT Podcast, I speak with Johannes Liegert from Paessler on all things Connectivity, IIoT and Networking Monitoring for industry 4.0 and Smart Manufacturing Johannes is Product Manager for IoT & Industry at Paessler. He is an experienced Product Owner and Product Manager, with a great history of working in the computer software industry. Skilled in healthcare protocols IHE Process, HL7 Standards, DICOM and industrial communication especially OPC UA. Strong engineering professional with a Master of Science - MS focused in Medical Informatics from Ostbayerische Technische Hochschule Regensburg. Paessler believes monitoring plays a vital part in reducing humankind's consumption of resources. Monitoring data helps its customers save resources, from optimizing their IT, OT and IoT infrastructures, to reducing energy consumption or emissions – for our future and our environment. More than 500,000 users in over 170 countries rely on PRTG and other Paessler solutions to monitor their complex IT, OT and IoT infrastructures. Hope you like the episode, and look forward to hearing your feedback!
Episode Summary: Unpacking Image Compression - A Dive into Medical Imaging's Invisible Workhorse In this episode of SIIMCast, we dive deep into the often overlooked yet crucial world of image compression, exploring its history, evolution, and pivotal role in medical imaging. Join us as we unravel how compression technology has shaped the way we store, share, and view medical images, from the early days of the internet to the cutting-edge applications in today's cloud-based systems. Highlights: The Genesis of Compression: We start our journey with a look back at the origins of image compression, highlighting the groundbreaking shift to lossy compression techniques that revolutionized how images are processed and appreciated. The introduction of JPEG set the stage for a new era of digital imaging, paving the way for its widespread adoption across various sectors, including the critical field of medical imaging. Compression in the Medical Realm: Our experts delve into the nuanced world of medical imaging compression, discussing the delicate balance between efficiency and integrity. With insights into the distinct requirements of lossy and lossless compression for diagnostic images, we uncover the challenges and considerations unique to compressing CT scans, MRIs, and mammograms. The Evolution of Standards and Technology: From JPEG to JPEG 2000, and the exciting prospects of JPEG XL and HTJ2K, we explore the technological advancements and standards that have driven the innovation in image compression. The episode sheds light on the critical role of DICOM standards in ensuring interoperability and the influence of web and cloud technologies in shaping the future of medical imaging. Looking Ahead: What does the future hold for image compression? We discuss the potential impact of AI and machine learning in refining compression techniques and the importance of open-source communities in fostering the adoption of new codecs. Our experts share their visions for a future where compression continues to evolve, driven by the dual demands of technological advancement and clinical needs. Join us on SIIMCast for an enlightening discussion that brings the hidden world of image compression to the forefront, revealing its indispensable role in medical imaging and beyond. Whether you're a tech enthusiast, medical professional, or simply curious about the digital world, this episode offers something for everyone.
La muerte de Piedad Córdoba Petro lamenta la muerte de Piedad. Jose Felix Lafaurie tambiénLa versión de Laura Sarabia sobre su casoSiguen los problemas laborales en el Ministerio del TrabajoPetro participando en política de manera descarada. El periódicoMás masacres y Petro silencio frente al temaIngrid Betancourt y su mal recuerdo de Piedad Córdoba22 asesinatos en Cartagena. El turismoEl contrato del SENA para Inteligencia Artificial por 50 mil millones
Amanda Coble is a pathologists' assistant with a diverse career path. After completing her education, she worked as a pathologists' assistant and also took on management activities, such as designing a new anatomic pathology laboratory space and participating in the selection and implementation of a new laboratory information system (LIS). Her experience in managing the LIS led her to explore a career in product management, gaining experience in understanding customer needs, working with software engineering teams, and rolling out new products. In 2021, Amanda joined Proscia and is now the Director of Product Management. Amanda believes that better collaboration between the clinical and industry parties is crucial for advancing digital pathology. This includes sharing real-world data for AI development, improving interoperability between systems, and working towards standardization, such as the use of DICOM format. She sees AI playing a significant role in triaging workflow, automating routine tasks, and unlocking new insights and functionality in pathology. Links for this episode: Pathology 101 for Tissue Image Analysis Health Podcast Network LabVine Learning The ConfLab from LabVine Dress A Med scrubs Learn More About Proscia People of Pathology Podcast: Twitter Instagram
Já sabe da novidade? O TCE-GO criou sua Intranet. Quer saber como usar? Confira as dicas com a chefe de Comunicação Interna, Vivian Duarte e a Diretora da Dicom, Heloisa Lima e com o Diretor da TI, Licardino Pires. Reportagem de Lu Zoccoli Edição de som de Bia Rezende
In this episode of "The Digital Pathology Podcast," we delve into the fascinating career of Dr. Anil Parwani from Ohio State University, a visionary whose ardor for technology and research paved the way for groundbreaking advancements in digital pathology.Dr. Parwani's journey commenced with a bold move – launching a web educational series during his residency – well ahead of digital pathology's mainstream emergence. As we delve into his narrative, you'll witness how his pioneering spirit laid the groundwork for a transformative trajectory. The pivotal moment? It arrived with the debut of the first digital pathology scanners. Dr. Parwani envisioned a future where patient care and pathology research could soar to unprecedented heights through digitization. His role in implementing digital pathology solutions, including collaborations with startups, deepened his grasp of the clinical significance of this game-changing technology.As the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated technological advancements in digital pathology, Dr. Parwani witnessed a significant 20% surge in adoption within his institution. How did they strike the ideal balance between remote and in-person interactions? Discover the insights in this episode.Furthermore, in an era where the number of medical students pursuing pathology is dwindling, we'll examine how digital pathology is sparking renewed interest. Dr. Parwani reveals how this field, with its research prospects, educational promise, and collaborative ethos, is reshaping perceptions and attracting fresh talent.Stay tuned for an expedition through the dynamic realm of digital pathology with Dr. Anil Parwani. It's a captivating odyssey into innovation, precision, and the future of medical science that promises not to disappoint!Start your 7-day free trial: Digital Pathology Club MembershipEPISODES YOU WILL ALSO ENJOY:The Best Online Pathology Book Ever w/ Nat Pernick, PathologyOutlines.comWhat the Heck is DICOM in Pathology w/ David Clunie, PixelMed PublishingDIGITAL PATHOLOGY RESOURCES: Digital Pathology Club MembershipBridging the Gap between Pathology and Computer Science - FREE Online CourseDigital Pathology Starter KitSupport the showBecome a Digital Pathology Trailblazer and See you inside the club: Digital Pathology Club Membership
En semana previa al superclásico revisamos las declaraciones de nuestro capitán Esteban Pavez en relación a la posible venta de Thompson a México. Recordamos las preciosas conferencias de prensa de Esteban Paredes, momentos icónicos de la selección chilena y la peculiar relación de fines de los 90 entre Pato Oñate y los mundialistas. El doctor Jadue conversando tranquilamente con los hinchas, para finalmente revisar un curioso paralelismo cinematográfico entre Jere y Álvaro Henríquez.
In this episode, our hosts chat with Keith Eklund and Harry Solomon about the recently approved DICOM Supplement 223 with support from SIIM. See press release at https://siim.org/news/news.asp?id=615974 Connect with us! You can find our podcast on Apple Podcast, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, or anywhere else you subscribe to podcasts. Please help us out by leaving a review on Apple Podcasts. You can find us on Twitter: @SIIM_Tweets, and individually at @mohannadhussain, @jaynagels, @AliTejaniMD, @AAnandMD Visit us at https://siim.org/page/siimcast Special Thanks to @RandalSilvey of http://podedit.com for editing and post processing support.
Smriti Zaneveld | Co-Founder - Lazarus 3D Using 3D printing we can take your patient's scans and rapidly validate, manufacture and deliver a high quality model of their anatomy in a matter of days. We offer a full turn-key solution: physician only needs to provide the DICOM image and Lazarus 3D takes care of the rest! Each patient is unique, we strive to establish personalized medicine solutions for patients and physicians alike. Our Pre-Sure® (PRE-operative SUrgical REhearsal) models are made with soft silicones and hydrogels that mimic human tissue making them ideal for practicing incisions and sutures. They allow you to practice on a 3D printed, patient-specific replica before operating. Personalized patient care improves patient experience, maximizes safety and drives better outcomes. --
Sponsored by Kettenbach Dental. Contact: (877) 532-2123 Website: www.kettenbach-dental.us Webshop: www.kettenbachusa.com Dr. Barret Jack Davidson is the owner of Texas Sage Dentistry in beautiful Historic Downtown McKinney. He is from a small town in West Texas, received his undergraduate degree from Abilene Christian University, and attended dental school at The University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio, where he was a leader and took part in many clubs and organizations, including helping found a future business owners club. After graduating from dental school (in the middle of 2020…), he worked two associateships: one in his hometown of Graham and the other at a FFS practice in Richardson. After being a dentist for eight months, Dr. Davidson purchased his first practice in Downtown McKinney, Texas, a small 3 op office that had no computers or even internet when he purchased it! Texas Sage Dentistry is a small, boutique-style practice where Dr. Davidson and his staff take time to get to know their patients like family and practice dentistry with the highest quality of care and compassion. Dr. Davidson currently lives just a mile from his practice in Downtown McKinney with his wife, Jordan, and bernedoodle, Harley Davidson. He loves spending time with his family, watching football, listening to podcasts, and playing disc golf. FFS Podcast Promotional Links: ONLY $397: Dental Membership Master Course with Dr. Chris Phelps www.membershipmastercourse.com Dental Membership Direct www.dentalmembershipdirect.com Dental Financing Direct www.dentalfinancingdirect.com Brought to you by Prexion: Offer for Fee For Service Podcast Members Purchase a PreXion CBCT model and install by December 31, 2022 and Receive either a free mounting stand (if needed) or a $1,000 rebate in the form of an Amazon or Target gift card. Since its inception in Japan in 2006, PreXion has been committed to revolutionizing dental and medical imaging. President & CEO Yasutoyo Imada has over 15 years of experience in both imaging and dental equipment manufacturing. In 2007, the company presented the PreXion 3D Elite, which offered the world's fastest data reconstitution time. After that, it began its expansion into the United States market with the distribution of its U.S.-exclusive PreXion 3D Excelsior model. PreXion's distribution has been rapidly expanding, serving thousands of customers across seven countries and in all 50 states. Through diligent manufacturing processes and tireless research and development, the company has remained on the cutting edge of CBCT technology, having increased market share 600% from 2016 to 2020. The company offers unrivaled customer support and dedication to continuing education opportunities, with partnerships among fellow industry leaders such as Catapult Education and 3D Diagnostics (3DDX). PreXion is a subsidiary of Funai Electric Co., LTD, a major consumer electronics manufacturer, which is traded on the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TYO). To learn more, please visit https://www.prexion.com. Model Descriptions: Explorer EX & PRO 3D CBCT models 3-in-1 CBCT (CT, dedicated pan and world's 1st integrated ceph x-ray) The PreXion Explorer PRO 3D CBCT is the world's first 3D imaging scanner that contains an integrated cephalometric x-ray. This 3-in-1 model (CT, dedicated pan and integrated ceph x-ray) is designed for dental professionals seeking high quality image clarity provided by one the smallest focal spot's in the industry at just 0.3mm. The model offers 4 fields of view (FOV) include 5x5 cm, 10x10 cm, 15x10 cm and a single pass, 15x16 cm FOV with no stitching. This large FOV is made possible by the largest TFT-type, flat panel detector (FPD) in the industry. It allows a 15x16 image to be taken in a single pass with no stitching in only 12 seconds. This provides both excellent image capture for sleep and airway analysis as well as TMJ diagnostics and reduced patient exposure. A 2-1 in version (CT and dedicated pan modes only) is also available and is called Explorer EX It is compatible with all DICOM compliant 3rd party implant surgical guide and CAD/DICOM merging software programs. Excelsior PRO 3D CBCT 2-in-1 CBCT (CT and dedicated pan) The PreXion Excelsior PRO 3D CBCT provides high quality image clarity with its 0.3mm focal spot, which allows for improved diagnostics of many conditions. Its 4 fields of view (FOV) include 5x5 cm, 10x5 cm, 10x8 cm and 15x8 cm for a large number of uses, including, but not limited to implant placement, bone quality studies, pathology, periodontics and endodontics. An optional 15x13 cm FOV is available for diagnostics requiring a larger field. In addition, an optional cephalometric arm attachment can be added. Explorer PRO is compatible with all DICOM compliant 3rd party implant surgical guide and CAD/DICOM merging software programs. About Dr. Sonny Spera Dr. Sonny Spera graduated from Union Endicott High School in 1981. With a four-year basketball scholarship he graduated from Syracuse University in 1985; majoring in Chemistry and Psychology. He was a member of the Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity. He was also the co-captain of the 1984-1985 Syracuse basketball team. Dr. Spera graduated from SUNY Buffalo Dental School in 1989 in the top 10% of his class. At SUNY Buffalo Dental School he was a member of the Omicron Kappa Upsilon Honorary Society. He was also UB Graduate Assistant Basketball coach. Dr. Spera has been in private practice since 1989 and is a member of the American Dental Association, the New York State Dental Association, the Sixth District Dental Society and the Broome County Dental Society. He is also a member of the International Association of Orthodontics, the BC Dental Society and the BCDS Study Club. Away from the office, he volunteers with several community organizations, including the Elks Club, the Son's of Italy, the STNY Flyers, the Academy of General Dentistry, and the Basketball Coaches Association of New York. He is the founder and president of ME Hoops Inc. Dr. Spera currently resides with his wife Angela, whom he met at Syracuse University, and their three children, Marcus, Erica, and Carla. In his spare time, he enjoys spending time with his family, basketball, golf, music and movies. 607-624-2962 (Cell) Sonnyspera@gmail.com Www.progressivedentalny.com Do you have a FFS practice? Would you like to be interviewed? Fill out the FFS Stories request form here: https://goo.gl/forms/7TaUF9Nqi49l1RFF2
Sponsored by Kettenbach Dental. Contact: (877) 532-2123 Website: www.kettenbach-dental.us Webshop: www.kettenbachusa.com FFS Podcast Promotional Links: ONLY $397: Dental Membership Master Course with Dr. Chris Phelps www.membershipmastercourse.com Dental Membership Direct www.dentalmembershipdirect.com Dental Financing Direct www.dentalfinancingdirect.com This episode is also brought to you by Prexion: Purchase a PreXion CBCT model and install by December 31, 2022 and Receive either a free mounting stand (if needed) or a $1,000 rebate in the form of an Amazon or Target gift card. About Prexion: Since its inception in Japan in 2006, PreXion has been committed to revolutionizing dental and medical imaging. President & CEO Yasutoyo Imada has over 15 years of experience in both imaging and dental equipment manufacturing. In 2007, the company presented the PreXion 3D Elite, which offered the world's fastest data reconstitution time. After that, it began its expansion into the United States market with the distribution of its U.S.-exclusive PreXion 3D Excelsior model. PreXion's distribution has been rapidly expanding, serving thousands of customers across seven countries and in all 50 states. Through diligent manufacturing processes and tireless research and development, the company has remained on the cutting edge of CBCT technology, having increased market share 600% from 2016 to 2020. The company offers unrivaled customer support and dedication to continuing education opportunities, with partnerships among fellow industry leaders such as Catapult Education and 3D Diagnostics (3DDX). PreXion is a subsidiary of Funai Electric Co., LTD, a major consumer electronics manufacturer, which is traded on the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TYO). To learn more, please visit https://www.prexion.com. Model Descriptions Explorer EX & PRO 3D CBCT models 3-in-1 CBCT (CT, dedicated pan and world's 1st integrated ceph x-ray) The PreXion Explorer PRO 3D CBCT is the world's first 3D imaging scanner that contains an integrated cephalometric x-ray. This 3-in-1 model (CT, dedicated pan and integrated ceph x-ray) is designed for dental professionals seeking high quality image clarity provided by one the smallest focal spot's in the industry at just 0.3mm. The model offers 4 fields of view (FOV) include 5x5 cm, 10x10 cm, 15x10 cm and a single pass, 15x16 cm FOV with no stitching. This large FOV is made possible by the largest TFT-type, flat panel detector (FPD) in the industry. It allows a 15x16 image to be taken in a single pass with no stitching in only 12 seconds. This provides both excellent image capture for sleep and airway analysis as well as TMJ diagnostics and reduced patient exposure. A 2-1 in version (CT and dedicated pan modes only) is also available and is called Explorer EX It is compatible with all DICOM compliant 3rd party implant surgical guide and CAD/DICOM merging software programs. Excelsior PRO 3D CBCT 2-in-1 CBCT (CT and dedicated pan) The PreXion Excelsior PRO 3D CBCT provides high quality image clarity with its 0.3mm focal spot, which allows for improved diagnostics of many conditions. Its 4 fields of view (FOV) include 5x5 cm, 10x5 cm, 10x8 cm and 15x8 cm for a large number of uses, including, but not limited to implant placement, bone quality studies, pathology, periodontics and endodontics. An optional 15x13 cm FOV is available for diagnostics requiring a larger field. In addition, an optional cephalometric arm attachment can be added. Explorer PRO is compatible with all DICOM compliant 3rd party implant surgical guide and CAD/DICOM merging software programs. Dr. Sonny Spera graduated from Union Endicott High School in 1981. With a four-year basketball scholarship he graduated from Syracuse University in 1985; majoring in Chemistry and Psychology. He was a member of the Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity. He was also the co-captain of the 1984-1985 Syracuse basketball team. Dr. Spera graduated from SUNY Buffalo Dental School in 1989 in the top 10% of his class. At SUNY Buffalo Dental School he was a member of the Omicron Kappa Upsilon Honorary Society. He was also UB Graduate Assistant Basketball coach. Dr. Spera has been in private practice since 1989 and is a member of the American Dental Association, the New York State Dental Association, the Sixth District Dental Society and the Broome County Dental Society. He is also a member of the International Association of Orthodontics, the BC Dental Society and the BCDS Study Club. Away from the office, he volunteers with several community organizations, including the Elks Club, the Son's of Italy, the STNY Flyers, the Academy of General Dentistry, and the Basketball Coaches Association of New York. He is the founder and president of ME Hoops Inc. Dr. Spera currently resides with his wife Angela, whom he met at Syracuse University, and their three children, Marcus, Erica, and Carla. In his spare time, he enjoys spending time with his family, basketball, golf, music and movies. 607-624-2962 (Cell) Sonnyspera@gmail.com Www.progressivedentalny.com Do you have a FFS practice? Would you like to be interviewed? Fill out the FFS Stories request form here: https://goo.gl/forms/7TaUF9Nqi49l1RFF2
Sponsored by Kettenbach Dental. Contact: (877) 532-2123 Website: www.kettenbach-dental.us Webshop: www.kettenbachusa.com FFS Podcast Promotional Links: ONLY $397: Dental Membership Master Course with Dr. Chris Phelps www.membershipmastercourse.com Dental Membership Direct www.dentalmembershipdirect.com Dental Financing Direct www.dentalfinancingdirect.com Sponsored by Prexion: Since its inception in Japan in 2006, PreXion has been committed to revolutionizing dental and medical imaging. President & CEO Yasutoyo Imada has over 15 years of experience in both imaging and dental equipment manufacturing. In 2007, the company presented the PreXion 3D Elite, which offered the world's fastest data reconstitution time. After that, it began its expansion into the United States market with the distribution of its U.S.-exclusive PreXion 3D Excelsior model. PreXion's distribution has been rapidly expanding, serving thousands of customers across seven countries and in all 50 states. Through diligent manufacturing processes and tireless research and development, the company has remained on the cutting edge of CBCT technology, having increased market share 600% from 2016 to 2020. The company offers unrivaled customer support and dedication to continuing education opportunities, with partnerships among fellow industry leaders such as Catapult Education and 3D Diagnostics (3DDX). PreXion is a subsidiary of Funai Electric Co., LTD, a major consumer electronics manufacturer, which is traded on the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TYO). To learn more, please visit https://www.prexion.com. Model Descriptions Explorer EX & PRO 3D CBCT models 3-in-1 CBCT (CT, dedicated pan and world's 1st integrated ceph x-ray) The PreXion Explorer PRO 3D CBCT is the world's first 3D imaging scanner that contains an integrated cephalometric x-ray. This 3-in-1 model (CT, dedicated pan and integrated ceph x-ray) is designed for dental professionals seeking high quality image clarity provided by one the smallest focal spot's in the industry at just 0.3mm. The model offers 4 fields of view (FOV) include 5x5 cm, 10x10 cm, 15x10 cm and a single pass, 15x16 cm FOV with no stitching. This large FOV is made possible by the largest TFT-type, flat panel detector (FPD) in the industry. It allows a 15x16 image to be taken in a single pass with no stitching in only 12 seconds. This provides both excellent image capture for sleep and airway analysis as well as TMJ diagnostics and reduced patient exposure. A 2-1 in version (CT and dedicated pan modes only) is also available and is called Explorer EX It is compatible with all DICOM compliant 3rd party implant surgical guide and CAD/DICOM merging software programs. Excelsior PRO 3D CBCT 2-in-1 CBCT (CT and dedicated pan) The PreXion Excelsior PRO 3D CBCT provides high quality image clarity with its 0.3mm focal spot, which allows for improved diagnostics of many conditions. Its 4 fields of view (FOV) include 5x5 cm, 10x5 cm, 10x8 cm and 15x8 cm for a large number of uses, including, but not limited to implant placement, bone quality studies, pathology, periodontics and endodontics. An optional 15x13 cm FOV is available for diagnostics requiring a larger field. In addition, an optional cephalometric arm attachment can be added. Explorer PRO is compatible with all DICOM compliant 3rd party implant surgical guide and CAD/DICOM merging software programs. Offer for Fee For Service Podcast Members Purchase a PreXion CBCT model and install by December 31, 2022 and Receive either a free mounting stand (if needed) or a $1,000 rebate in the form of an Amazon or Target gift card. About Dr. Jared Harris: Dr. Jared Harris of Harris Family Dentistry in Malvern, PA. When you come in for a visit with Dr. Harris, he will take the time to truly understand what your concerns are and provide you with individualised care. Dr. Harris is always open to listening to his patients problems and getting to the bottom of what's really going on. He enjoys spending the time getting to know each and every patient, making them feel as though they are family. Dr. Harris grew up in Newtown Square, PA, a suburb not far from his practice in Malvern. After graduating from the University of Pittsburgh with a degree in neuroscience, Dr. Harris went on to pursue his dental education in Philadelphia at the Temple University Kornberg School of Dentistry. Dr. Harris continues to further his education in implants, endodontics (root canals) cosmetic and biomimetic restorative dentistry through countless hours of continuing education. He also has a passion for helping treat patients who suffer from migraines/headaches and TMD! He prides himself on keeping up with the latest techniques and technology available today. Dr. Harris loves spending time with his fiancé and family! You can typically find him on the golf course in the summer or on the slopes, snowboarding in the winter. Website: www.HarrisFamilyDentist.com Instagram: @harrisfamilydentist Phone: 484-874-5050 About Dr. Sonny Spera Dr. Sonny Spera graduated from Union Endicott High School in 1981. With a four-year basketball scholarship he graduated from Syracuse University in 1985; majoring in Chemistry and Psychology. He was a member of the Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity. He was also the co-captain of the 1984-1985 Syracuse basketball team. Dr. Spera graduated from SUNY Buffalo Dental School in 1989 in the top 10% of his class. At SUNY Buffalo Dental School he was a member of the Omicron Kappa Upsilon Honorary Society. He was also UB Graduate Assistant Basketball coach. Dr. Spera has been in private practice since 1989 and is a member of the American Dental Association, the New York State Dental Association, the Sixth District Dental Society and the Broome County Dental Society. He is also a member of the International Association of Orthodontics, the BC Dental Society and the BCDS Study Club. Away from the office, he volunteers with several community organizations, including the Elks Club, the Son's of Italy, the STNY Flyers, the Academy of General Dentistry, and the Basketball Coaches Association of New York. He is the founder and president of ME Hoops Inc. Dr. Spera currently resides with his wife Angela, whom he met at Syracuse University, and their three children, Marcus, Erica, and Carla. In his spare time, he enjoys spending time with his family, basketball, golf, music and movies. 607-624-2962 (Cell) Sonnyspera@gmail.com Www.progressivedentalny.com Do you have a FFS practice? Would you like to be interviewed? Fill out the FFS Stories request form here: https://goo.gl/forms/7TaUF9Nqi49l1RFF2
Due to the complexities of managing and aggregating various data types in healthcare imaging, many clinicians only have access to tip of the iceberg of information available. If clinicians can have access to all imaging data, they would have the full picture of the patient history and provide better patient care. The simplified approach with DICOM web standard makes this is possible. Steven Nichols and Chris Lindop, Interoperability Leaders at GE Healthcare, discuss how DICOM web is a game changer in the healthcare industry allowing easy integration and with minimal familiarity with DICOM. Please contact us if you'd like to learn more: https://landing1.gehealthcare.com/USC-WB-21-03-HCD-VNA-IT-Talks-Podcast-Contact-Us.html?
As the digital pathology community is embarking on the journey of DICOM implementations questions we haven't asked ourselves arise...Is DICOM and image format or is it a standard? What is the difference?Are all the DICOM images the same or do they differ?how do the differences influence the technology developments and workflows?Is there a single best way of implementing DICOM or do we need to keep iterating?And who can help us on this journey?Who would be a better guest to talk about it than the DICOM standard editor himself, Dr. David Clunie?This podcast episode is a recording of a live broadcast we had together recently where he answers all the abovementioned questions and some more!If you are thinking of using or implementing DICOM for your digital pathology journey, be sure to listen to this episode!THIS EPISODE'S RESOURCES:DICOM pathology whole slide image repository (click on the histopathology image to access)Contact David Clunie at: dclunie@dclunie.comWatch on YouTubeOTHER EPISODES YOU MIGHT LIKE:DICOM standard for pathology annotations. Why do we need it? W/ David Clunie, PixelMed PublishingAnd if we are not connected already, let's connect on LinkedIn!
Hablamos con Ignacio Vigouroux, co Fundador Descuentos Rata nos revela algunas claves para estar atentos ad portas del Ciberday; "¿Cómo le explicas a tu hija de cuatro años que no quedó por el DICOM?" parte de los comentarios que recoge "Educación: la promesa incumplida" sobre el sistema escolar con mercado pago, de esto y más conversamos con Cristián Bellei, Coautor del libro y Doctor en Educación en Harvard. Conduce Jorge Lira.
The eighth episode focuses on digital health and how the messy data in healthcare can be tamed with data standards and vocabularies. It features Dr. Adam Chee - an expert in health informatics with additional backgrounds in public health and business, who is now serving as the head of Smart Health Leadership Centre at the National University of Singapore. Let's listen to someone who never stops learning and serves as one of a few WHO experts for the area of digital health. Let's get inspired by someone who can recognize the importance of structured data not only in health informatics, but also in clinical research. ...Because it is obvious that having some form of structured data (i.e. HL7, SNOMED-CT, DICOM etc.) is better than data with no structure!
Att skapa effektiva lösningar för hälsa och sjukvård. Vi träffar Johan Andolf CSA inom Azure Healthcare som berättar allt från hur vi kan arbeta med FIHR och Dicom i molnet, skapa insikt och mervärde från fritextsök, analys av data och hur vi kan hämta ut forskningsdata för medicinska syften på ett säkert och strukturerat sätt. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode, hosts Mohannad and Prasanth interview Brad Genereaux about his chapter on Standards and Interoperability in the new edition of PII. Going beyond the #alphabetsoup of the important standards that govern the imaging informatics world, the discussion covers a brief history of the development of standards, such as DICOM, HL7, IHE, and looks at how they shape the landscape of the Imaging Enterprise. Indeed, awareness of these standards is even essential in deciding whether to adopt them, particularly when looking through the lens of deployment, maintenance and support, and eventual upgrade paths for the enterprise. In addition to developing richly integrated enterprises, standards play a crucial role in ensuring data portability. Brad highlights the working groups and their interactions with the community to maintain and improve these standards. Brad Genereaux is Medical Imaging and Smart Hospitals Alliance Manager at NVIDIA, and has a keen focus on accelerating artificial intelligence, visualization, and virtualization in healthcare. As a passionate and engaged healthcare and medical imaging leader, Brad evangelizes the ubiquitous adoption and integration of seamless healthcare and medical imaging workflows at scale. Brad is deeply involved with the community in building and implementing standards like DICOM, HL7, and IHE to make this happen. Resources: https://www.dicomstandard.org/activity/wgs https://wiki.ihe.net/index.php/Committees https://www.hl7.org/events/workgroupmeetings.cfm https://siim.org/page/siim_taskforces Connect with us! You can find our podcast on Apple Podcast, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, or anywhere else you subscribe to podcasts. Please help us out by leaving a review on Apple Podcasts. You can find us on Twitter: @SIIM_Tweets, and individually at @mohannadhussain, @jaynagels, @AliTejaniMD, @AAnandMD Visit us at https://siim.org/page/siimcast Special Thanks to @RandalSilvey of http://podedit.com for editing and post processing support.
Listen in to learn more on our latest Healthcare IT Talks podcast episode 8: Image Management Outside the Radiology Department with Michael Valante, Global Business Development Leader and Ryan Halos, Chief Technology Officer, Medical Imaging at Dell Technologies. Michael and Ryan share their knowledge in healthcare and offer thoughtful approaches to data storage. They discuss the challenges, benefits, and strategies for consolidating DICOM and non-DICOM data sources. *Information shared on this episode is opinions of Dell Technologies
In this episode, hosts @mohannadhussain @jaynagels Prasanth and @AliTejaniMD interview @ChrisRothMD, @IntegratorBrad, and @_kodon, co-authors of the IHE AI Interoperability in Imaging White Paper. Chris Roth serves as Vice Chairman of Radiology, Information Technology and Clinical Informatics at Duke University, Director of Imaging IT Strategy at Duke Health where he is also associate professor of Neuroradiology. Brad Genereaux is Medical Imaging and Smart Hospitals Alliance Manager at NVIDIA, and has a keen focus on accelerating artificial intelligence, visualization, and virtualization in healthcare. As a passionate and engaged healthcare and medical imaging leader, Brad evangelizes the ubiquitous adoption and integration of seamless healthcare and medical imaging workflows at scale. Brad is deeply involved with the community in building and implementing standards like DICOM, HL7, and IHE to make this happen. Kevin O'Donnell is a Senior R&D Manager at Canon Medical Research USA. As an enthusiastic believer in the value of standards to healthcare in general and medical imaging in particular, he is a past Chair and contributor to DICOM and IHE (Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise), and is currently a member of the SIIM Board of Directors and Chair of the Process Committee of QIBA (Quantitative Imaging Biomarkers Alliance). IHE Wiki Page on the paper, including the video on navigating the paper by Brad. The White Paper can be found here. Connect with us! You can find our podcast on Apple Podcast, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, or anywhere else you subscribe to podcasts. Please help us out by leaving a review on Apple Podcasts. You can find us on Twitter: @SIIM_Tweets, and individually at @mohannadhussain, @jaynagels, @AliTejaniMD, @AAnandMD Visit us! Special Thanks to @RandalSilvey of PodEdit for editing and post-processing support.
[Werbung] und zwar in eigener Sache: Nicht besetzte Stellen und nicht vorhandene Skills sind zwei der größten Hindernisse bei der der Digitalisierung im Krankenhaus. Verschärft wurde dieser Fachkräftemangel auch durch regulatorische Vorgaben wie das KHZG und die diversen TI-Projekte. Da wir Krankenhaus-IT-Wissen hier im Podcast seit über 6 Jahren behandeln, als Professoren sowieso an unserer Didaktik feilen und pandemiebedingt viele interaktive Lehrkonzepte ausprobiert haben, wollen wir bei diesem Problem des Fachkräftemangels helfen und haben in Kooperation mit der Digital Avantgarde in den letzten 1,5 Jahren fleißig Lehreinheiten zu den wichtigsten Krankenhaus-IT-Themen erstellt. Begonnen haben wir mit dem Thema "Krankenhaus", das sich wiederum in Krankenhausprozesse (Klinischer Kernprozess, Auftragskommunikation, Pflegeprozess, Medikation, Abrechnung, OP-Management, Termin- und Ressourcenmanagement, Klinische Pfade, Reifegradmodelle ...) und Krankenhaussoftware (KIS, RIS, PACS, PDMS, Archiv ...) unterteilt. Ein weiterer, großer Block ist die "Interoperabilität" mit Kommunikationsstandards (HL7v2, FHIR, CDA, HL7v3 ...), Semantische Interoperabilität (OPS, ICD, LOINC, SNOMED CT, PZN, ATC..), Prozessuale Interoperabilität (IHE, DICOM) und passender Software (Kommunikationsserver). Abgerundet wird das Lehrangebot durch "Regulatorische Bedingungen" wie z.B. Patientenrechte, KHZG, TI usw. sowie Methodik (u.a. Projektmanagement, Anforderungsermittlung und -priorisierung, Agile Methoden). Shownotes: Digital Avantgarde Akademie WebseiteE-Mail an akademie@digital-avantgarde.de Auf der DMEA sind wir auch regelmäßig beim Stand der Digital Avantgarde, Meldet Euch einfach, wenn das Schulungsangebot für Euch interessant sein sollte.
Pathology Standards and Hackathon In this episode, host Mohannad chats with Jason Klotzer and Markus Herrmann about pathology imaging standards. The team discusses the unique perspective of digital pathology and how the specialty has adopted DICOM standards to meet the needs of the pathologist's imaging workflow, as well as a hackathon sponsored by the DPA and DICOM Workgroup 26. Jason Klotzer is a customer engineer working for the Healthcare vertical of Google Cloud, and he is based out of Austin, TX and has worked in the medical imaging space for more than 15 years. He has architected several PACS and VNA systems, specializing in visualization of medical images for diagnostic reading, recently focusing on the needs of AI/ML and analytics in medical imaging. Markus Herrmann serves as Director of Computational Pathology at the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and Assistant Professor of Pathology at Harvard Medical School. His research focuses on the development of novel quantitative imaging biomarkers and computer-aided diagnostic tests combining microscopy imaging, computer vision, and mathematical modeling. Markus is active in national and international efforts to advance the standardization and adoption of digital and computational pathology, including the DICOM Working Group 26 Pathology, the IHE Pathology and Laboratory Medicine domain, the Pathology Innovation Collaborative Community, the Digital and Computational Pathology Committee of the College of American Pathologists, and the Regulatory and Standards Task Force of the Digital Pathology Association. Connect with us! You can find our podcast on Apple Podcast, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, or anywhere else you subscribe to podcasts. Please help us out by leaving a review on Apple Podcasts. You can find us on Twitter: @SIIM_Tweets, and individually at @mohannadhussain, @jaynagels, @AliTejaniMD, @AAnandMD Visit us at https://siim.org/page/siimcast Special Thanks to @RandalSilvey of http://podedit.com for editing and post processing support.
We hear that multiple file formats or perhaps, more importantly, lack of a uniform file format seems to be a big issue in digital pathology. Why is this? What do we even mean by a file format? And will we be able to overcome this barrier on the road to full scale adoption of digital pathology? Yves Sucaet, a PhD in Bioinformatics, has a research background in systems and network biology. In 2012, he became intrigued with the idea of applying bioinformatics algorithms to virtualized microscopic material (whole slide images). Back in Belgium, he went on to co-found Pathomation, together with Dr. Wim Waelput and Dr. Mark Kockx. The mission of Pathomation is to provide software (middleware) for digital pathology, allowing any organization to efficiently implement any digital pathology workflow imaginable. We discuss why there are multiple file formats and the challenges this causes. Do different types of applications necessitate different file formats? (i.e. 2d vs. 3-d imaging, H&E staining vs. fluorescence?) How does evolving technology and new vendor specific applications create problems? And of course, DICOM seems to be the most talked about format. Why has it become the standard in radiology but not pathology?
The Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) standard for digital medical imaging has been around since the 1980s. First adopted in radiology it is slowly spreading in pathology as well. Now with image analysis being an integral part of medical imaging workflows, the question arose if the annotations made on the images should have a standard format as well? And can the same DICOM format be used?With deep learning taking over the medical image analysis field, the answer is a definitive yes! Deep learning requires a large number of annotations to train robust image analysis models. Making them requires a lot of time and work and having them in a format that can grant interoperability between different digital pathology and image analysis systems is becoming a requirement. In this episode my guest Dr. David Clunie, the DICOM standard author is explaining what annotations are, why do we need to standardize the format in which they are created, and why the interoperability of digital pathology systems is actually the responsibility of the users of the system and how to be proactive with system vendors to grant it. If you are working in the medical image analysis field or are looking into different image analysis systems that require annotations, this episode is for you!And if you want to learn more about the DICOM standard for images, listen to:this episode of the “Beyond the Scope” podcast by DPA with Dr. ClunieOr visit the following resources:The DICOM websiteDavid Clunie's Medical Image Format Site
La abogada Daniela López, parte del estudio AML Defensa de Mujeres, relevó la importancia de la nueva ley que establece un registro de deudores de pensión de alimentos, con nuevas condenas. "En Chile todo lo que tiene que ver con la familia era considerado privado. El no pago de las pensiones de alimentos -80% en esta condición- no tenía castigo público" señala Daniela como una de las razones para entender cómo se llega a una cifra tan grande sin que existiesen mayores herramientas para defender este derecho de la infancia. "Cuando metemos a la ciudadanía y al Estado a cuestionar (...) lo privado se vuelve público. A partir de esta ley, esto es considerado maltrato infantil y se tipifica la violencia económica por primera vez". Un capítulo que devela los múltiples castigos sociales a la maternidad.
I wanted to set in that corner there, because lizards are here first. Guess I've just said somewhere else. So the lizards moved. So I took their spot. And I just met a really friendly bunny rabbit. And some butterflies on a hike I went on today that was probably about four hours. So I'm a little bit tired. And I was thinking about flow as choiceless awareness when I was on the hike, because of what Jamie wheel and Steven Kotler talk about, if somebody is like falling to their death, and they managed to save their life. And their reaction time and their calculation of things, is faster to the point where they're able to save their life somehow. And basically, they're saying it's faster than conscious choice. What is conscious choice, it's a bunch of programs overlaid over our senses. So instead of sensing and acting, we're enacting this so called conscious choice. And so they're studying how it's easier to get into flow in these states, where the body is put under sort of extreme circumstances. And in those extreme circumstances, there's no point in choosing with those programs that we've been conditioned into seeing through. So it's a bunch of conditioning, that is the thing that we think chooses. And all of that is the accumulated me programs and, and knowledge, so we're choosing through our knowledge. And that knowledge is overlaid over our senses. So we're not sensing things holistically and acting with our senses without thinking. And so what I'm saying is that, to me, it sounds like what Krishnamurti talks about with choiceless awareness. And what that means, in a way is that there's no programming, they're doing the calculating, which is the choosing. So if, if there's no one there choosing, then what is choosing? Well, what is choosing when one is falling to one's death, and managers. Without thinking, like, basically, the person is falling in Gravity faster than thinking. So gravity, the speed of gravity, and falling in Gravity is faster than thinking, we can't think and decide, oh, I'm gonna put my hand here and I'm gonna put my hand there, and I'm gonna do this and that something else comes in. So something else is choosing something else is moving us and animating us. When we're falling at the speed, that gravity induces on us. And I feel like in a way, consciousness itself chooses, but it's not really choosing. So an ego mi program might choose between a bit or B bit. Whereas when there's no programming they're choosing then there's infinite bits available. And the conscious will or the me or the ego is choosing between very limited amount of bits, that it's been programmed into choosing between. And so I was thinking about how, while walking down the mountain, down the switchbacks that when we walk And we're going down a mountain we fall. So we're not actually walking as much as falling in gravity. But we're able to control that with our legs. And in the same way, we might think we're choosing to move our legs, but we're just moving our legs and gravity's helping. So there's this sort of play between the two, there's this dance. And I feel like we also have a field of consciousness. And the programming prevents us from falling in the field of consciousness. Whereas if we were just falling in the field of consciousness, that field of consciousness, in combination with it, impressing upon all of our senses holistically would animate us, and that would allow us to act without choosing. So much of our movement anyway, we don't choose to do but it's sort of partly gravity and partly us. So I think there's this other element, this field of consciousness that in a way, in map consciousness, we're falling in the field of consciousness. Without the programs in the way, the programs are kind of the net, the parachute that allow us to sail through life and give us time to like, make these decisions and things when another parachute is a false structure. So the reason I'm saying this is because it demystifies it in a way, not just these few words about it. But to act like it's some big mystifying thing that we need to be falling out of the sky in order to go into is making it seem like it's something so on unattainable. I feel like the field of consciousness. It doesn't choose that makes it sound. The field of consciousness animates us. So just like walking down a hill in the field of gravity, the field of gravity is helping to animate us. So the field of consciousness when it interacts with our body, and all of our senses, animates us. But there's this tension of our programs that constricts us, and actually keeps our animation very limited and fragmented. According to very few programs, it would be like being in a video game and having very few moves that one can do on the controller. It's like the difference between the original Nintendo system and Sony PlayStation, the latest one, there's just so much more that one can do. So the original controller would be like the choices, the programming that we have now. And we're being controlled by the programming as opposed to the totality of the mind and the field of consciousness and the universe. I can see this stuff so subtly and clearly. It's fascinating. It's like studying the animation of the mind. And I'm wondering if the self dialogue about all of this is seeing all those subtle nuances of it. To learn that language, and then it's like progressive training of seeing and perception Because the first experience of map consciousness is so intense, but then as one explores the subtle nuances of mapping consciousness itself. If one is seeing it that way all the time in daily life, then it's not like being blind one day, and then having full vision, the next. It's having that vision every day. And then it just seems normal. And again, I still haven't come off my medications or anything. But I'm hoping to do that when I get back home. I'm not sure what the language is. But I also feel like it's the language of, of beauty. Because beauty isn't human abstractions and programs. It's not the way we've been trained to see. But it's everything else. So one way to see beyond it would be just to see when one is seeing something that is a human construct. And I wonder if words can be used in service of beauty. I think that must have been how they originally came about a sense of awe and wonder. But now they're being used to divide up and fragment the beauty. At which point, it's no longer beautiful. And perhaps we need to speak that language, again, in order for the human brain to allow human consciousness to fully inhabited again, in terms of the upcoming generation. And we have all these words running through our nervous system like static like noise. And we don't have words and perception of beauty running through our nervous system. And our nervous system is designed to perceive beauty. So if we want to get back to its original function and design, then learning that language is important. I was saying to someone that if you ever see me kind of just standing there and walking in circles, maybe that I'm in a holding pattern, waiting for the next thing to catch my attention. Someone to walk up and say, Hey, you want to do this? Or do you want to do that? It really is just like wandering with love, like that shirt that I have. And I feel like the mental health system could be a type of holding pattern for people, it's holding them in that pattern. But we can also start to transform into wandering with love. And wandering with love in a way is like allowing the field of consciousness to move us an understanding that it will catch us just like our legs will catch us each step we take down a mountain. Right now we don't use all our senses. We just use our me sense, which is our programming. We filter everything through the me and we make choices based on that. Can we allow our senses to be in the field of consciousness and start to awaken our senses holistically and move us as The moment just like we move with gravity, what can we gravitate towards? With consciousness? What can we conscious Tate towards? So part of it is learning the language of perception, perception action in the field of consciousness. And partly why things can get a little bit dicey is when we're in the field of consciousness in lower levels. And a lot of times we act accordingly, we act out that level. And I feel it's important to sort of protect oneself from that. Because we become more like ping pong balls, then having these programs of control. We could even imagine that everything we think and imagine if we projected it out of our eyeballs, and that energy of those images and sounds actually has force in terms of making something happen. It's an active agent. So what is the light coming out of one's eyes? Is it good images or bad images? And beyond that, what about no images, because the image we're projecting from our eyes is the choice we're making. we're choosing to extract that information from reality, which is usually based on old information. And so not projecting any images and being choiceless li aware is a qualitative difference. And then anything is possible because our perception is clean and consciousness itself. That energy field of consciousness can animate us towards that which the mind would want us to create. And these images that we make are our partiality. And they make life partial. And we're re experiencing from these old partialities. And it's actually a limiter. The light and sound we project from ourselves limits all of the information out there. And I don't know what I don't know to what extent that is necessary. It seems to be necessary. actually feel like the consciousness animating us versus choice from programs. It gestures us, it acts through us, as us. And through those actions. We move towards something else then. Our programs which is actually moving away from life. It's contracting away from life. It's contracting away from actually meeting the mind. And when the mind and the human beingness meet. And there's no me as this mediator. Then the mind is what moves us consciousness And then anything becomes possible. And I feel like in a way, with these crisis events that seem to happen, it's like going as far along as one can, on that particular path of the mind animating oneself. And then one gets to the limit and it becomes fearful. And it's a type of death in a way. I feel like one could be dying to alternate realities. Because one sprain is in the quantum state. And then when one goes far enough along that path, certain realities have to die. But one experiences that as something terrifying. And one might even have to experience that extreme terror in order to sort of save other people from experiencing that. Because there's so much terror out there that people are not experiencing, because they're using certain means to get through it. And there's nothing wrong with that, per se, but it's not resolving those energies, they have to be resolved some way. In consciousness. I don't quite know how that works in terms of this whole mechanism of terrifying pneus. I feel like we could gesture ourselves quantum. I wonder what kind of lifestyle design would facilitate being open to possibility and, and moving in possibility as possibility. Instead of moving in programs as programs, and I've already had that sensation in my consciousness, I'm just wondering why it seems to for burnout. And somebody once said to me, of higher level of consciousness, don't push let it come to you. Not really sure what that means. But I feel like it partly means that it doesn't take time. So it doesn't matter if I sit here in the same spot for 10 years. And then if I got up and I was moving in possibility, whatever was meant to be created, could be created very quickly. Or it could be created the same way if I got up and did that now. So it doesn't really matter. In terms of time, and it's already here, it's a matter of really just going for it, I guess. Whatever that is. And I feel I'll take some time to figure that out. Maybe I'll continue to wander after this.I was reading a bit of a book by Krishna Murty called fire in the mind. And there was a bit in there about listening. He said, Those who are passionate to find out who want to hear will listen, not to me. And then he said, it's in the air. And I think that's the subtle hearing of insight and seeing of insight. And I sort of realized that seeing in that way is harvesting insight and giving voice to it. Seeing those subtle things, I can see what I'm saying. But it's hard to really put words to it. And then I also realized in a way, I'm harvesting my mania right now, even though I'm not in the state of mania, I feel like I'm doing everything I would be doing. If I was really manic, but I don't feel manic. So I guess I'm embodying my mania. But I'm also talking about stuff. And I'm taking pictures of my notebooks and posting it on my blog at a later date. And that's something I would totally do, if I was just really manic, I would think, Wow, this is so profound, I need to share it. And I'm not even thinking it's so profound, I need to share it, I'm just sharing it for the heck of it. To really not have any build up of anything, partially, because I just forget. So I can't even really think of accumulating stuff and then waiting and then sharing it later has to be done right away or not at all. And that's kind of part of how the mind works in the process. So it's just going according to a different an edited process. And that's the thing, too, is when one gets into that state of consciousness, it's an unedited state, there's no pre forming of words and planning what to say. So just really getting with that in every aspect of life. Not thinking anything is worth clinging on to for later. So I'm wondering if I'm in that higher energy state, but not feeling it. And I talked about in earlier videos, how the neurology grows in ways to be able to contain and harness that energy and not be overpowered by it, because there's more nerve tracks for that. And I don't even know if that's true, but it seems to have some kind of truth to it. So I'm doing these actions that I would do if I was really manic, but I'm not. So in a way, I'm just living that way, congruent with what that energy would animate me to do. beyond my suppose of control, but the thing is, once I have the nerves for that energy to animate me in that way, it doesn't feel like I'm out of control. Because it's not energy beyond that, which my nerves can handle. If you know what I mean. So in a way, if I was surfing a wave that was bigger than the one I'd ever surfed before, I might feel like I'm gonna fall or I'm out of control. Whereas if I have served that same size wave a million times, it's gonna feel natural. So it's the same thing with serving consciousness, that wave of consciousness, energy comes in, and the nerves have to get used to moving in those ways. And that consciousness can come in and take over any one of us. So really being able to move with the wave Consciousness is imperative. Because if a big wave comes in and takes over even more people, it's going to be really chaotic. So the more we can move towards embodying those gestures and ways of being, the better. And I had the sense that choice is a program choice itself. And that is the fundamental program. Whereas when that program is gone, then there's just the census on adulthood. by choice. And I feel like what that consciousness is, is the unknown in a way, so we have to be fully able to sense the unknown, and act accordingly, instead of being always projecting our programs, and then acting based on that. And one can have access to that energy and be acting and acting and acting with the unknown, and then get to a point where it's beyond the comfort zone of the nervous system. And it gets freaked out and turns back. And I wrote down, there is a possible world filled with love. If we were all filled with love, if we're all moved by love, what kind of world with that great. And I feel like the real app of reality is epigesturetics. Every move we make is recorded in the fabric of reality and moves us towards a certain possibility, we can choose a different action. The next moment, if we're always acting, based on the movement of love, that doesn't take time to figure that one out. So we can immediately changed our path. And I feel like our gestures harvest and uncover that world of love. As we move as love, it's like our bodies are painting that into actuality. It's kind of like carving a sculpture. And as we move in the fabric of love as love that sculpt us as well, it's sculpture, neurology, and our body. It's like a game of love. And our body is quantum it has quantum effects, it makes things possible. It creates, and it has a certain range of motion, and gestures. The music of love can play through us. gestures, and words are the notes of the quantum body instrument. Can we go from seeing problems to seeing possibility? And we've been turned into thought processors instead of quantum processors, possibility craters, and our thought process creates a vortex of sound that keeps us separate from the flow of life. And, and that listening that hearing. We can't hear that subtleness when we're listening to our own thoughts, we're giving voice to the past so we can't give voice to the moment. And we've superimposed our thought process over life process. And I wonder if freedom is from the pre formulation of words. And I want to say again that Krishnamurti said that meditation is unpremeditated art. So nothing premeditated, nothing going on in terms of cognition. And I feel like that's a similar way to saying, harvest practice, embody or practice one's mania in a way, it becomes an art form. So in a way, it's the art of mania. And maybe that's part of math consciousness is the art of living. There's no formula for living and if one puts a formula After living, then that's not living. Because formulas aren't alive. And human beings, and other living things aren't alive. And I don't think we live in reality, we live in mi ality. And I wonder if our language can be our fruit. A plentiful harvest that we share the fruit humans produce is language. And right now we're not really making fruit with it, we're making weeds and weed killer can our language be of insight and create vision. And I wrote down a peer, as in one peer, and to peer as in two people. But what I was looking at was a peer is what appears and to peer is to look deeply into. So a peer to peer is what appears to look deeply into. And I was thinking about that in terms of my brain, buddy, and wondering what we'll end up talking about, we might talk about our experiences. And there could be commonality there. And it might show in a way that we speak the same language, a language of seeing an experience and seeing beyond experience, and what it possibly means and harvesting the fruit of language differently and sharing it. I wonder if so called psychosis is fear leaving the system, or fears of leaving the system of thought, because there's some suppose it safety in that it could be fear of change, fear of transformation, fear of breaking out of the chrysalis seems like a bit of a tide, this energy comes in this consciousness and animates us, and then it goes out. And then when it goes out, all the things on the sea floor are exposed. So they have to be adapted to when there's no consciousness, and when there's a lot of consciousness. So in a way, we have to be kind of like barnacles. And our vision gets written over by programs in the structure of thought, like the mental health system, we speak in a different way. And we're speaking a little bit out there and not quite making sense because we're learning a new language of perception. And so afterwards, we learn the language of pathologizing ourselves. But it would be cool to still keep learning this language of perception and being animated by consciousness. That's kind of like when you're a kid. And around one parent, you know, you can be goofy and around the other parent, you know, you have to be serious. It's sort of like, realizing that we're being subject to certain authoritative structures or not. And I was thinking about falling in gravity and how the body takes over and the senses take over in order to save our life. And I was thinking that the speed of consciousness is kind of like, the speed of falling in gravity. It's way faster than thinking. So again, it's just the brain operating at a faster speed. And it's a speed faster than thinking. So when we think that we are thinking process, then it can be scary, because we think we're out of control. But really, it's just faster processing. And then the slow processing of thinking is afraid. And that it's sort of like if somebody falls in Gravity, and they managed to save themselves somehow. They're not and they realize it was quicker than the speed of thought. They didn't have to think about it. They would just be happy that they managed to save their life that and in that way, when the consciousness comes in, it's happening to save life in a way because it's life energy itself, this time. Consciousness. And thought, is delay. It's dividing up life. And so sometimes we fall in consciousness. And then after it happens, we're all thinking and stuff like, Oh, this means I'm ill or something. But it could have been some other mechanism of healing and helping the brain and life and the field of the universe. It's a faster processing. And again, since thought can never be faster than that process of consciousness, we can never really think about it and encapsulated, so there's no real point. So when it's over to say, that means it's all this mental illness and stuff that could never capture what actually happened. Or even after something like a terrifying so called psychosis, just forget about it. And so when we're in that map conscious state, we're being pulled by strings, kind of like puppets of the environment, puppets of perception. Right now, we're puppets of thought, are puppets of the past. But we could actually be puppets of the universe. The word puppet is kind of funny. So being a puppet of the universe is like being fully alive. Whereas being puppets of thought, is just being a biological robot. And this choice process is very binary. It's good or bad. Whereas the consciousness is animation. It's multi dimensional animation, being animated by the sights, the perceptions, the insights, the sounds, the feeling, the smells, everything all at once. So the quantum is a computation of animation. And thought is a contraction of this animation. It tones down the animation by toning the nervous system with sounds. And I feel like we're animated by gravity and consciousness. Just like we can fall in Gravity, we can fall in consciousness. And we don't actually fall in consciousness, but it's the faster speed that is faster than thought, that renders thought obsolete. And then that's when we're flowing with consciousness. And consciousness is related to gravity, because our thoughts contract our nervous system and our muscles and change our center of gravity, and it changes our degrees of freedom in motion and how we gesture in actuality. So, less thoughts mean, less gravity means more consciousness, and more action and more degrees of freedom in gesture, which gestures in these other realities. And these thought, sounds, images through our nervous system, prevent clarity of perception, that is needed for the fluidity of action and learning. And I say learning because this perception is its own learning process and we learn to move as consciousness and as the moment fluidly as opposed to moving. According to Richard programs, it's actually learning how to be alive in a way. Learning how to move in the field of consciousness, learning how to dance as loveI feel like the mind of humanity, the total mind is trying to free us from the thought that was necessary. But the mind of humanity is testing whether it can release us from those programs, and trust us to perceive and act as love. And it feels powerful. And so when we get in touch with that power, do we share it? Or do we use it against people? Would we use it to hurt? Or would we use it to help. And I feel one of the measures of this is how we act towards nature. So can we look at another creature doesn't matter where it is on the totem pole, and look with love, and respect and admiration for the part that it plays in the whole. And when we do that, it's registered in that creature. It's registered in the mind of the collective of that creature. And that creature knows, just like how today I was sitting, and a lizard just came up right beside me, and then ran over my shoes that I had taken off and put beside me, and then started sending himself. And seems like we all have thought, parachutes. In order to slow down, moving in the field of love as love. We're attached to our me, we don't understand what would be acting if we didn't have this parachute of thoughts. We can fall in love, but we can't fall in Gravity, we can fall in consciousness. I think part of my test was years ago when I made that video with the flies. And I was in awe of these flies. And in a way, it could have been my invitation into these perceptions, and starting to make sense of them backwards and forwards at the same time. And I said in the video, I wouldn't hurt a fly. And one way to get into flow is to look at nature beyond human constructs, and not look at the separate thing and name it but actually see its inter relatedness and be curious about what it does with its time and it's life energy. I wonder if we can let beauty run through our nervous system, run through us, run as us and animate us are meant to be the most beautiful creatures on earth, with the ability to appreciate beauty, to look at it, and also to make more of it. But we're using our beautiful instrument to destroy beauty. And we don't realize we're destroying ourselves. I was happy to find that quote, in the Krishna Murty book that says, when we destroy nature, we destroy ourselves. Because I had that sense a long time ago. So beauty is the fuel. Truth is perception. And love is action. But all those could be interchanged. And I remember Krishnamurti saying that, that beauty is indestructible. Think the indestructible element is that beauty. That's always there. I feel like thought is a holding pattern. It's holding so many human beings in a pattern. And really, we want to be released from that pattern. And the me is a pattern. And I feel like our senses become a quantum sense. We sense possibilities. We see relationships. And that's where we learn. I was editing a video and I was watching myself and While watching myself, it was the first time I really had this sense that I could see that I'm speaking what I'm seeing. Because I was going on and on for like 10 minutes. And as I was saying more and more, I was actually speaking from what I was seeing. And I'm always doing that. But it was the first time I actually could see myself seeing as I was speaking. And I probably could before but it was the first time I was really aware that I was really following what I was seeing, as I was saying it because it was the first time I was hearing it, since I said it, because I say things from nothing. But I really had this extra sense of seeing what I was saying. And maybe that's good in terms of if somebody watches this one day, if one can actually see what i'm saying, When I'm saying it, or see that I'm saying what I'm seeing not saying stuff from pre formed thoughts in my brain, because that's really, the whole point of it is to be able to see and say for yourself, or listen and say listen to these subtle things in the air. Really, we just want to be in touch with that voice and give voice to that. Because it's infinite. I wonder what happens when love loses control. Seems like thought is trying to control this love. It's afraid of it. I feel like what we project out of our eyes, the light and sound limits possibility. It's premature collapsing of the wavefunction. We don't allow all the information to penetrate our being and then make the quantum calculation and respond with our full being. We respond according to the programs and images that we're projecting. So it's like that light coming out of us. And that sound coming out of us that is invisible to others is meeting and breaking up all the information, light and sound coming towards us. And so it's chopping up all the information. So one can receive the whole impression on the clear mind screen and collapse the wave function. And I feel like it's actually that's part of what creation is, is is having that correct information clearly. impress upon one and then responding creatively. One can respond in many possible ways. So it's not necessarily one correct response. But it's definitely likely actually all correct responses doesn't matter what you do, really. But when one is choosing between programs, it can never be a correct response because it's old. And it's it's gone out to meet the information coming in and and impinged upon it and impeded it. So, one is even getting any of the information. So So when all the information is collected in a quantum way. One has the degrees of freedom to respond in many possible ways. And the thing is that when one is in touch with that, one does even really know oneself what one is going to say or do exactly. And in that way one is kind of entertained by oneself because everything is surprising even what one does, because it's not coming from past programs. So if I even think about my day to day, I didn't really plan anything. It was a day of complete possibility. The past is collapsing. The present is impinging upon the present. Or it's actually making it so we can't collapse wave functions. Because there's a hologram in the way. After my hike today, I caught back and everything seemed brighter. Even the kitchen, it just seemed so bright. And there was an orange and I picked it up. And it seemed so bright. And I was thinking about how beauty is related to color. So when things seem more beautiful and vibrant, it must have some kind of association to the quality of the nervous system. And it's sort of a measure of where one's at. If one can be in awe of an orange. When one is seeing oranges all day long for for several weeks, then that's the different quality beyond the things as they are are the things that we would normally measure them as like this is an orange, big deal. And I think there could be a diligence in consciousness to keep the programs in abeyance. And I feel like consciousness is when we are really awake. So there's a sleep state, which is sort of like glow. And then there's a programmed state which is kind of like no as in knowing things acting based on previous knowing and also an O as and just saying no to the living, whatever one is encountering and the awake state which is flow. So glow, no and flow. I hope to create perceivers seers people who can see meaning and unfold that. Can we be masters of mania, of the wave of consciousness, can we serve that wave? Can we be moved by celebrating possibilities instead of conflict and problems? And I feel like medicating changes our voice from possibilities to problems, from the movement of consciousness and the mind to the movement of thought and programs.I was thinking about today how it's quite safe to flow here where I am. It's safe to be a ping pong ball and just bounce around doing whatever, because whatever it is, that I run into, will be something safe and beautiful and have a harmless quality. And I was wondering, if I take that same movement of this brain and nervous system out into society, that it doesn't really translate well, and one can run into fearful things, and respond quite strongly or want to retract quite strongly. And when one is moving around, sort of randomly, one can start to accumulate a sense of unsafety. And then feel like it's actually safer to retreat to the programs of thought and society, and move around based on those. In a way I feel like so called psychosis is the fear of being alone outside the programs. So if there were more of us outside the programs, we wouldn't be alone outside the programs, and it wouldn't be so easy to get afraid. And I was thinking about awareness and how we need to be aware in order to make an art out of our life. We can't be unaware because unawareness is defaulting to the programs. And beauty is our full self. And I feel like I can see beauty in nature. And sometimes I have a hard time seeing it in humanity. But I remember being able to look at people and change people into their beautiful self, a self that I don't even feel they were aware was contained within their being. But I think looking with those kind of eyes, changes people. I wonder how to do that. I sort of had a sense of wondering about the possibilities of the human brain, because in that state of so called mania, there was this in touchiness with those possibilities, but not really understanding how they worked. And it could actually be just the seeing possibilities and collapsing the wavefunction around that. But the trouble is, one eventually sees scary possibilities and sees one moving towards that. And it's scary. So one retreats. So moving between perceiving in problems and perceiving and possibility is a dance and a flux that maybe we have to get used to until the brain is more settled in that seeing of possibilities. Because when the brain is in that state, it's actually creating those possibilities that it sees, because we're usually seeing thoughts and a very limited reality based on that. So it's almost like the brain being comfortable with infinity. And can we glimpse people into wakefulness. And when we first get in touch with my consciousness, it feels like we're out of control because it's faster processing. And thought, tries to come in and resume control. And when it can't, then we see that we're not our thoughts or there's a power beyond our thoughts. And I feel like the nerves have to release the sluggishness of the thought programs. And I talked before about random DICOM provisions. I made up this exercise thing where you stick weights and go weights and wrist weights on into Sort of spin around and, and in a way, bring space into the body. But I think map consciousness and so called mania is a type of random de contraventions of the universe. The universe gives us synchronicity, and all these different things, but they're actually deprogramming language and gestures, to see that there's other forces at play, and for the opportunity to play with them. And I sort of just saw that when one has access to all those powers, oftentimes it gets used for oneself. And when one comes back when realizes that the point of power extra energy is to give it to others, because if only one person has power, then it's usually used as power over others. But it can be used as energy to share with others, so they have it too. So the nervous system is learning to act faster. It's like the nerves want to act a certain speed. But then thoughts are getting in the way. It's almost like how elite athletes have mental blocks. Sometimes they're overthinking things, and they're actually not playing as well as they can. Like they're really close to the championship point. And they play really poorly in the last part, because they're overthinking things. They're thinking about the result. They're not just playing and this state is actually not about results, or goals or anything like that, at all. So as soon as one wants to use something for a result, or particular thing, then the power is gone. And then all of a sudden, I came up with this crazy theory, that thought is an illness that has infected the human nervous system. Consciousness is trying to heal us of this. It's trying to purge the programs and the thoughts. And map consciousness is a ti programming language. And just as we wouldn't listen to two songs at the same time, why would we listen to our me voice? And then we can't hear the universe. Me is the noise that prevents hearing the universe. And I wonder why did our nervous system get infected with sound? I wonder if it's human percept to deficiency virus. The sound is inner sound, blocks our perception. And there was thinking about the term ESP or extrasensory perception, and how in map consciousness we get in touch with quantum sensory perception q SP, when I wrote that thing about being infected with sound viruses, I got freaked out because I had some premonition like extrapolations from it. And then I realized that if we're infected by a language virus, or a sound virus, then it's mainly a problem of how we use language, or how language uses us. But really, if this is what it's partially about, then it's helpful. We've been taken over by the sound of our own voice. And when we see that we can use our voice in creative ways, and also to give voice to beauty. And that's not a goal. It's not something to do in the next 10 years or to attain it's something that can be done now and can only be done now. There's no goal in beauty. We can't make beauty into a goal. And if we saw this beauty and spoke as that we wouldn't think in terms of goals.Two nights ago, I was trying to fall asleep and I couldn't fall asleep. And then I felt like I was going into this vast emptiness. It was almost like I could feel myself. Looking into the unknown, the void consciousness itself, I could see the patterns and the play of light. And it felt like that play of energy was the energy that created all things. And it could create anything. I saw a big fish swimming. But it was like the energy pattern of the fish. And I had the sense that the fish could just easily be created from the energy because the pattern is there. And in a way, all the molecules and biology is a result of that pattern. So it might look like all this complicated evolution has to happen. But really, all of that complexity rests upon the pattern when it's manifest. And then I just felt like my consciousness or consciousness was trying to leave my body and travel all over the place and And when that happens, it feels like it can start to feel scary. My heart was pounding and then I was feeling pretty terrified, and I got up and I grabbed a Seroquel. And I took it. And I also put my zap strap beside my bed, and then I unlocked the door. And I also grabbed my phone and the charger. So that's sort of my little safety plan. Because I know if I had my phone, then I can call for help. If the doors unlocked, someone can get in. If I have my zap strap, I can secure myself if I no longer feel safe. And the odd thing was that as soon as I took the Seroquel, it went away. Like it wasn't like oh, I have to wait 10 minutes for it to kick in. It was just taking it, it stopped. And then I eventually had to take another one to fall asleep. I couldn't quite fall asleep with just one. But it was interesting because when I got up and I was scared, I could hear and feel this very faint sense of what I will just call right now the suicide program. Having this sense that being that terrified, meant that I had to end my life because it was just too scary. And I feel like I've talked about this before where when the consciousness is coming back to the body. It's scary. So consciousness goes on this journey is seeing all these things the formless realm and then nothing is and then I wonder if it's partly that it becomes scary. So consciousness goes back to the body. And one of the things that gets you to go back is taking a pill or maybe even just the gesture of taking a pill it doesn't even have to kick in that that pattern of getting up and taking a pill is like saying Okay, that's enough of that. And the thing too is that I'm in California and I can't afford to be hospitalized and I don't have my family here to support me and things like that. And part of me feels like since that happened maybe I should just go home but I'm going to see how it is. I'm going to continue to take the Seroquel and I took to that first night and last night I had to take three I took one convulsive took another one couldn't fall asleep. took another one and then I fell asleep. So today I definitely feel drugged up. It's almost like having a poison. My brain cells, so consciousness doesn't come in and just take over so much. I wonder why consciousness wants to leave my body, maybe I'm not taking good enough care of my body, maybe I'm not putting enough care into my body. I used to put a lot of care into my body. That was one of the main things I did. And now I don't really do that at all. I'll go to the kitchen and just grab chips to eat or ice cream or whatever's there, I'm not really paying attention to taking care of myself. Whereas before, I would probably spend four hours a day just taking care of myself. And I don't know if that's true, but maybe my body needs that gesture. And I was reading a book last night wholeness in the implicit order by David Bohm. And it's really interesting. And it talks about our use of language and changing our use of language to a different structure. So there's not all this emphasis on division. And I didn't really get through that chapter yet, but I tried to read it today, and I can't even focus. So part of me feels like when I've seen too much, or my brain is too active, it gets to this place where consciousness is even like leaving this body to gather more information from other places than what's immediately perceptible. And then when it starts to do that, it's almost like my brain consciousness is going too far beyond the skill set of my brain or the collective brain. Or it's gone too far outside the collective level of consciousness. And it needs to come back. So taking a pill isn't necessarily saying that my brain is diseased, it's almost too fluid. It's so fluid that it kind of goes beyond itself. And and I think that some people can probably master that, and maybe I will at some point, but I haven't so far, I haven't been able to keep going in it. And I don't see maybe there's no point in going into it like that, because the unknown is infinite. And once the brain goes into the unknown, it's in the infinite and the body is finite. So the body would get afraid of the brain going on into infinity, because if it goes too far, it can almost want to stay there in infinity, just traveling around choice lessly, powerfully, fluidly, and, and I've talked about the adjacent light body, and I feel like one day we'll actually all live as light bodies. So when we do the fluidity of consciousness and the fluidity of the body will be in alignment, and it won't matter if consciousness goes off. But right now, since we're in these material bodies, it does matter. And the fact that I'm in California, I have to be extra careful. So it's kind of difficult because I don't have anyone to talk to. And if I do then maybe I don't want to freak people out. And forgive me if I'm talking kind of like well, blah, blah. I feel like I can't really enunciate things properly. My mouth is like slow and slow down. My whole physiology is poisoned and slowed down. And I'm okay with that. I think my whole being just needs to rest and so I also Talk to the people from hardy nutritionals. And they sell a micronutrient supplement that's good for people who have these kinds of concerns. And oftentimes, people can come off their medication. And I'm not planning to come off my medication on purpose, but I will likely start that settlement somewhat, because it might actually help with some of these things I'm experiencing, I feel like if it helps somebody was, say, so called psychosis. And it's giving the brain the right nutrition to not have consciousness come in and push the brain into altered state experiences. And it might be actually the right nutrition for perception, to be able to just perceive and not be flung into the whims of those perceptions. And I wonder about this, because I think there's actually something to the fact that so many people get thrust into this process of consciousness animating us and sort of being these calling birds calling out the fact that something's wrong with society structure. And that's why people are going into these other states of consciousness. And I remember a quote, I think her name was Emily Levine, and it was in her TED talk about trixter. And I want to go back to it actually, because she talked about something like, at the end of her talk, she said something like, Don't go too far into beauty. Because you have to be able to meet your audience. And I feel like my brain has just gone too far into beauty. It's too beautiful here. And my brain does this when it's starting to thrive. And so in a way, since society is not designed for thriving in the very fabric of the brain needs to be poisoned, in order to sort of come back down to the resonance of what's really there collectively. Because as Krishnamurti says that I am the world and the world is me. And I do sense this very strongly. Sometimes. I don't, I don't know, I just, I really want to be able to stay here to go to emotional CPR in early April. If I can get to that point. At least that would be great. But I do want to stay here longer. But I do have to be so careful. And if I ended up going back early. I just I just don't know what to do with myself. Because if this little blip was kind of a bit of a so called crisis that's only two months, I thought I would have easily five months at least without a sign of anything, especially being in such a beautiful place. So to have it come on after two months, in this beautiful place, is kind of freaky. And now I'm carrying my zap strap and my Seroquel with me, Everywhere I go, and my phone and my charger just actually be extra safe. And it seems to really help and work. Like as soon as I have those items, I just feel like I can't hurt myself. So it's almost like the brain is scared back to the body. Or the mind is scared back to the body and then part of it is that it's scary. But I also feel safe. So I'm gonna keep taking the Seroquel every day for at least a week. Maybe two, like I did before. But the differences this time it's after two months. But it wasn't a full blown crisis. Like it wasn't Like, last time, it was maybe like before last time, I had a little tiny so called panic attack. And I took out Seroquel, and I didn't need it. And I kept not taking it for a couple of weeks. And then eventually, I needed to take it and go through a full crisis. So I'm wondering if this time I did the thing that I keep saying to myself, I mean to do which is take it at the first sign, instead of being like, okay, I'll ride out this wave, alright, of this wave, and then not taking it. So this time being in the scenario that I'm in where I can't risk going into a full blown crisis, I took it sooner. So maybe I'll have to take it for two weeks, every two months, or something, I don't know. But it just makes me slow and not able to read and, and makes it harder to do some of the tasks that I need to do. But I just really feel like I do need that psychological safety to just come off these meds and, and be healthy. And I just really wish there was a supportive community for that. And there are but it's just a few and far between. So I might lay here and make some videos, and because it doesn't require very much reading is just talking. But I remember last time, not having the urge to make videos at all. So that might happen again. But I could at least catch up on some of the things that I've written. And I was even thinking today about how these videos are good in a way because one day, I could just die, I could just kill myself and it could just be over. And at least by creating this daily without waiting to accumulate some kind of special protocol or how to which I don't really think is possible, then just sort of an acknowledgement of the moment and and maybe putting some of that language out there. Re languaging and playing with language. And that's the thing with a crazy wise Town Hall. They're saying how should we frame this instead of the mental illness paradigm and how do you frame infinity. We're trying to frame something that can be framed. It's this process that No words can ever capture. It's a process of life. I'll talk more about that later. So he had two weeks of dullness. But I'm starting to see that I just have to poison myself back. poisoned my brain so it can't see so much so it can process so much information. So it doesn't get lost in so much beauty. It's almost like learning to ride a horse and taking Seroquel it's like pulling on the reins like whoa, slow down. I can't go that fast. Again, it's not so much about anything. It's not about something. It's not speaking about mental illness or anything. Or speaking about spiritual emergency. It's speaking as the Spirit. So we're trying to speak about the spiritual emergency or mental illness but It's more a matter of what we're speaking as, are we speaking as human beings? Or are we speaking as human beings? The emergence process itself is to disintegrate the me. So if we speak about the me, we're actually reinforcing the me. We need to speak as that which we experienced. But as experience now, each moment, so so we could look back and, and feel how we spoke before feel the quality of where we were speaking from. We were speaking from our experiences in the moment. And so it's not about thinking about those experiences, it's about continuing to speak as the moment and you can't frame that. There's no frame for that. And so all of this dialogue I've had with myself, it's not really a me speaking, and how I feel it. Through the emergence process, we emerge into being just a human being perceiving in the moment, free of stories. So no story can tell adequately anything about that place in us where we speak from. Really, it's about speaking the story of the moment, or the perception of the moment each moment. That stories about that. There's no that there. I don't know if I'm making any sense. And I am curious about this using language differently thing that David Bohm is going to talk about in his book. I feel like just speaking, as the moment is using language differently, whether we use old ways of structuring sentences or not, it's just a different quality of where the words are coming from. Because just to learn different ways of speaking, it will actually change consciousness, eventually to because it's changing the perspective and how we see by saying, I have no idea. Again, the forgetfulness is interesting. And that's part of being scared back into regular consciousness and taking drugs to feel that taking medication, I mean, it's like taking medication to feel again, separate. But interestingly enough, the other end is that consciousness tries to separate itself from the brain and leave the body. I'd love to be able to be supported to just not medicate myself during that and see what happens.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/bipolar_inquiry. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Fausto Rosario y Gustavo Olivo discuten los temas más importantes del día a día del acontecer dominicano e internacional a través del espacio 'Escarbando'. Transmisión a través de Acento TV
Listen NowDr. Steve Muyskens, Medical Director, Cardiac MRI, 3-D aPPROaCH Lab, Cook Children's, takes us into the world of 3D heart printing. It’s a fascinating journey into how this advancing technology can take the guess work out of pediatric heart surgery, helping more young patients can thrive into adulthood. Dr. Steve Muyskens Related InformationCook Children's 3D aPPROaCH LabCardiac Magnetic Resonance ImagingCook Children's Cardiothoracic Surgery programCook Children's Endowed Chair ProgramCook Children's Heart Center Transcript 00:00:02 Host: Hello and welcome to Cook Children's Doc Talk. Today we welcome Dr. Steve Muyskens, medical director of the Cardiac MRI program here at Cook Children's in Fort Worth, Texas. Dr. Muyskens, is an endowed chair supporting the expansion of our CMRI program and its diagnostic uses. He has since established the three-dimensional lab for the planning and printing of congenital heart disease, which uses advanced technology to support presurgical planning and family education for patients with complex heart conditions. He is our expert on this subject. So thank you for being with us today, Dr. Muyskens/ 00:00:36 Dr. Muyskens: Thank you very much for the invitation. 00:00:38 Host: So what exactly is a 3D model? And what is the process for creating that model? 00:00:44 Dr. Muyskens So I think the important part is to kind of start with the patient. There are conditions with varying degrees of complexity that our current diagnostic modalities fall short in some manner. So those patients have long been difficult to manage. We started realizing that we can use technology like 3D printing and virtual 3D animation to help us better understand their condition. So when we identify that patient, whether it be an older patient who has already had some surgeries, or a newborn who has a very complex heart, who we're hoping to do an initial palliation, or surgical repair on, the first thing we decide is, what is the best modality to obtain the information that we would need to then use that technology. The two most commonly used technologies would be MRI, or cardiac CT. You can use rotational angiography in the cath lab, but that's much less commonly used. Once we have that selection made, the data is obtained by us obtaining a typical CT scan or a typical cardiac MRI. But then that data, which is in a raw form called DICOM. DICOM data is then moved to specialized software. And from there, I take that data, and we segment it is the term we use, basically manipulate that data and create a virtual model, essentially, from that information. That model can then be viewed either in the virtual space, so on a typical computer that you would flip around, but then again, you're still only in two dimensions you're looking at in a screen. So then typically, we move on to a 3D printing of that data. So the typical segmentation portion, or manipulation of the data, can vary from anywhere to two to 24 hours of time, depending on the complexity of the model. An
Dr. David Clunie is a radiologist, medical informaticist, DICOM open source software author and editor of the DICOM standard. He joins Beyond The Scope to discuss image format standards surrounding digital pathology adoption. For more information, please visit: https://www.dclunie.com/ .3:00 Intro4:15 Background on PACS and DICOM, and the importance to pathology6:39 History of DICOM as the image standard for radiology10:04 Why an image standard has yet to emerge for pathology15:38 How pathology departments can work with IT departments to aid the digital transition16:54 Clarifying misconceptions about PACS21:52 Discussing all cost elements associated with digital pathology transition27:43 Advice to pathologists regarding image archival standards long term33:20 Collaborative efforts between pathology, radiology, and IT departments37:22 Educating the pathology community on image standards and regulatory barriers44:51 The role of enterprise IT in DP adoption
Tom Paladino is a scalar energy researcher based in Florida. Scalar energy is the fundamental life force found everywhere in the world, space, and universe. It originates from the sun and stars. Chi, prana, OM, mana, life force, pyramid energy or zero-point energy are synonymous terms for scalar energy. He theorized that all energy in the universe initiates as scalar energy; and that the sun of our solar system and the stars of the universe are the points of origin, “the storehouses,” for scalar energy. He further theorized that scalar energy is instructive energy, as the entire universe is instructed by this Divine Essence. Subsequently, all spiritual, cognitive, emotional and physical action in the universe is initiated and maintained by scalar energy instructions. Scalar energy provides order in the universe. Where can you connect with Tom? Insta @scalarlight FB @light_scalar YouTube @TomPaladinoScalar Brandon Handley 0:00 Go 54321 Hey, there's spiritual dope I am on today with Tom Paladino. Tom is a scalar energy researcher based in Florida. scalar energy is the fundamental life force found everywhere in the world space and universe. It originates from the sun and stars ci prana. On manna, lifeforce, pyramid energy or zero point energy are synonymous terms for scalar energy. Thomas theorized that all energy in the universe and this G's a scalar energy and that the sun of our solar system and the stars in the universe are the points of origin, the store houses for scalar energy. He further theorizes that scalar energy is instructive energy as the entire universe is destructed by this divine essence. Subsequently, all spiritual, cognitive, emotional and physical action of the universe is initiated and maintained by scalar energy instructions. scalar energy provides order in the universe, man, it's awesome. I've never heard about it until we connect it. So thanks for Tom for introducing scalar energy in this form to me. Tom Paladino 1:12 Thank you, Brandon, thanks for the opportunity to speak on your podcast Brandon Handley 1:16 100%. So I always like to open these up with the idea that, you know, we as human beings are vessels for this divine energy, right. And that's kind of what what's coming through us is meant for these explicit moments, you and I know we're gonna get something from this and the person who's listening to this podcast, there's a specific message that they're going to get that could only come through Tom palatino, what is that message today? Tom Paladino 1:45 Everybody possesses scalar energy, I have instruments but but even more importantly, your mind and your heart are scalar energy vessels. And as we get into this discussion, you'll see how important it is to think highly of yourself and highly of others, and to have a good heart. Because your mind and your heart trajet transmit scalar energy. It's so important. Brandon Handley 2:13 It's so great. I love the fact that I mean, you're scientifically based, right? You know, you've got the instruments, and you've got the tools. And you've got these use cases and factual applications, versus me who just certainly sits in here in my room and just tells everybody that they can, you know, do what they want and feel how they feel. And it's going to impact them, right. So you've got you've got tests, you've got things that you actually showing up for the one that's what I think is great, right? This is just it's kind of the pinnacle of, you know, science meets, you know, divine nature slash energy. And oh, yeah, by the way, it works. Unknown Speaker 2:55 Yes, Brandon Handley 2:55 I like so how did you? How did you find yourself in this space? Tom Paladino 3:00 I was always intrigued by what what some I called metaphysics, that, you know, the blending the merging of science and religion, science and religion, as far as I'm concerned is, is an equivalence, it's the same, it's just a different way of looking at reality. So, as a youngster, I started to study Nikola Tesla, the great scientist, and he was a mystic, but he also was a scientist. And he really could blend those two worlds. And that's why he's so prolific. That's why he his work was so monumental, because he didn't discount any approach. He accepted reality as it is, he had no preconceived notions, to discount something, he was an open vessel, if you will. And I want to be an open vessel, I want God just to help me and to show me the way. And as long as you don't put any impediment, he will do so. And you'll see how you can become a prolific inventor or, or theorists, if you will. Brandon Handley 4:03 So you brought up the idea of impediment. And I think that I've heard you say this a little bit. I'm listening to one of the other podcasts. What would some impediments be? Tom Paladino 4:15 Every everybody has an impediment. And the role has created those impediments. And sometimes sadly, we've bought into it. And you can't limit yourself. Don't let the road limit you don't limit yourself. People have unlimited potential. But you know, some people say they we live in a box and in many ways we do. don't define your life by by the way others want to place you in that box, you really have to live outside of that box. And you have to follow the truth. I've always prided myself and in following the truth, if you will. And I realized I'm iconic classic. I realize I'm cutting edge. But that's what it has to be. You can't necessarily Run with the pack all the time. The pack is not necessarily correct. Brandon Handley 5:05 Yeah, no, it's funny, right? Like, I've never been a big fan of the pack. I'm not sure whether or not that served me or not to date. But it sounds like you know, again, it's, it serves you and allowing you to, to follow a path less traveled and finding some pretty, pretty exciting spaces and places. So you tap into Nikola, and you realize that he's open, nothing is left out. And then, you know, what are what are some of the next steps, right, like walking through, like even bringing this up to your family and saying, Hey, you know what? I found this thing called scalar energy. And I'm all in what's your family saying to us? I mean, where are you? What's happened at that time in place? Tom Paladino 5:50 Well, God bless my parents are no longer with us. But they always looked at it with a critical eye, if you will. They were really, really not too keen on this, because they just didn't understand it. And I have a very supporting wife she's fully in. And thank God for that. But if you will, what am I describing? I'm describing a new technology. It's technology where we can harness the sun's energy or the stars energy. And many people think that that that is just a little bit too esoteric, then how could you possibly do that? Well, Nikola Tesla did that and was very successful. And in many ways, I'm walking in his footsteps. So it is a new and emerging science. It's the new way of looking at reality. And I consider myself a trendsetter. There's not many people on the planet that are doing what I'm doing. So for now, I stand alone. But I know that this will pay big dividends in the future, and then eventually, the world will see the merit of this research. So I'm at the vanguard, I'm happy to be at the Vanguard. I can't say that there's many people are following in my footsteps or the footsteps of Nikola Tesla, because it's, it's so laborious. And it's so difficult, and it's hard to get people to even convince people that this type of energy exists. Brandon Handley 7:14 So how have you been able to confirm that you're continuing Tesla's work? Right? Right? Tom Paladino 7:22 Well, it came to my observation that test the leader in his wife was not working with electricity, he himself said he was working with non hurting energy, meaning it's not electricity, it has no frequency. And that's what I'm working with this energy. scalar energy does not have a frequency, it's nine hertz. And so in that sense, I'm following in the footsteps of Tesla, Tesla had scalar energy instruments, I have scalar energy instruments. What's my point? Well, if you can go back to whoever the series of events that brought upon the computer that was quite unique, you know, there are many people who could lend their hand to that. But nonetheless, it was, at one time, it was a new science, that new and emerging science, and that's where we're at right now with scalar energy. There's very few researchers, it's the new and emerging science. I know I'm on the right track, I know that I have bonafide scalar energy instruments, and what I really want to inculcate is this, it's not electricity. I'm working in a different dimension. This is what it's hard for people to understand. It's not electricity. Brandon Handley 8:36 Tom, so non hurts in? And I'm just trying to let you know, right? I'm thinking of radio waves and frequency, if it's not hertz, and does that mean that there's like, there is no upper down amplitude or anything like that. And that is just it's available kind of at all times. Tom Paladino 8:56 It's the matrix it permeates the universe. Unknown Speaker 9:02 The universe. Brandon Handley 9:05 So we're already kind of immersed in it, we look at it like more like almost like holographic technology. Tom Paladino 9:11 Exactly. Okay, universals holographic. So in a hologram, there really is not point A and point B. Everything is one point. Brandon Handley 9:21 Right? Tom Paladino 9:22 There's terms that you use, such as quantum entanglement, meaning what that everything is connected pre connected. So if you will, let me use this analogy. If you're looking at the East Coast of the United States and the West Coast, those are two different regions. New York City is not LA. In the electromagnetic spectrum. Those are two cities in the scalar energy spectrum, New York and Los Angeles are connected. They are pre connected, meaning what it's a holographic representation of the United States. It's no longer that can be plotted out on the grid system. No, everything is one point. It's quite profound. Brandon Handley 10:04 I love that. Right? So there's no time and space in that. And then my interpretation, my understanding is that in a hologram, all information is contained in any single point of information. Yes. Okay. Really? Okay. So, so, so scalar energy is is, is all about there is no. Is it is it? Is it right to say that there is no specific, like variants in it, right? Like it's one size, energy that fits all type of thing. Tom Paladino 10:46 Yes, that's it. That's a nice way of describing it. It really is the mind of God, what some people call consciousness, you've heard that time consciousness, what does that refer to? It refers to information field, a universal holographic information field, that's what I'm working with. Now, you could you could see why if I had my druthers, the entire road would be on scalar. Because it's an infinite source of energy, it's kind of obvious. Brandon Handley 11:15 Here's what I liked about too, I heard your account, like I said, I listen to a couple of your podcasts. And one of the things that I really enjoy is like, you know, I'm working to, you know, maybe branch out and you know, connect with a few 1000 people, right? And and what is your vision for your practice, if you could share that with the audience, Tom Paladino 11:34 I want the world to convert to scalar energy, it's a much superior technology than that of electricity. And once we have this new technology in place, it will really forward the human race, this is really going to help to advance mankind. So if you look, look at our trajectory, look, look how mankind has has progressed over the centuries. And technology is one of the tools that really have made our lives enjoyable, affordable, comfortable. I'm saying that scalar energy is the next quantum leap, you know, the pun intended scalar energy is going to be the game changer for us. So your your, your your goal, your mission is to impact slightly more than 1000 or a couple 1000. Brandon Handley 12:22 Your goal is to impact the entire planet. Yes, Tom Paladino 12:27 that's my gut, Brandon Handley 12:27 which I love. I love that right? Um, yeah. And and the fun thing is, is there's no reason why that's not possible. Right? Right. If we look at the grand scheme of things, you're leveraging universal cosmic energy, which is the entire, you know, currently known universe to worldly, right, which is like this speck of dust. So why not? Why? Tom Paladino 12:59 Why not? Why not reach for the stars? Why think small Think Big? Right? Brandon Handley 13:05 Right. Right. So the tools that you've developed? How are they able to, you know, how many people can your current tools impact at one time? Well, Tom Paladino 13:20 I want to make this clear. When I work with people, I work with them by way of a photograph. Now, what do I mean people email me their photographs, and they I connected them in the quantum realm, there is no physical connection. It's all informational. So to answer your question, my instrument can easily work with 2030 40 million people a day by way of a photograph. Now you see why I'm thinking big scanner energy instrument can send energy by way of a photograph to 20 30 million people in one day. Brandon Handley 13:54 Yeah. So what Yeah, and I've heard some other stories, too, just the eradication of HIV, herpes, other viruses? You will Let's share a couple of those stories, I think, yeah, the story of how many people that did they went through an HIV study in Africa, Tom Paladino 14:14 right, right. Well, let me lay the groundwork. With this instrument, I can control molecular forms atomic forms. So people will send me photographs and I can I can buy wave their photograph, I can identify a virus that they have, by way of the quantum field again, everything I do is by way of a photograph. So I have been receiving photographs from an HIV AIDS clinic in Delhi, India, and many of those people are HIV positive. And by working through their photograph, I can detect the HIV virus from their photograph and I can negate it, break it down, transmute it, call you call it whatever term you want upon the photograph. So my work is directly and exclusively to a photograph. Well, lo and behold, these people are going out and getting a test. Some of them are polymerase chain reaction tests. And after I work with these people, they find that they have no HIV. It's been eradicated. It's been fragmented. So you can't, you can't explain the apple by the orange, so to speak. And if my scalar energy instrument is working in one paradigm, scalar energy, it's hard to relate that and to substantiate that and then the electromagnetic spectrum. But the evidence is becoming overwhelming. If I can eradicate breakdown a virus by way of a photograph, that usually translates into better health for a person in the electromagnetic spectrum, Brandon Handley 15:53 looking at reality, so you but but let's go back to you know, it was it was 50 people in the study, right? And how many of the 50 were you able to eradicate the HIV virus and Tom Paladino 16:05 Oh, so far, everybody that had a test, everybody gone to get a test, all of those tests are negative, HIV negative. So again, let me put this in the context. I live in the United States, I've never been to India, but people from India send me their photographs, people are HIV positive. And after working with their photographs for a few months, many of those people will subsequently get a test the polymerase chain reaction tests and those tests come back negative. Brandon Handley 16:36 and want to go back to kind of the beginning of the conversation, we said everybody can kind of do this. Right? How is does your tool like train the person to do it? I'm just kind of curious, like, how do you see that? Right? Unknown Speaker 16:53 here's, Brandon Handley 16:54 here's an, I'll bring it up for this reason. I'm like my sitting around, you know, Yogananda. Autobiography of a Yogi right. And one of the scenes, a couple of things, one of one of his masters in their chairs a person by giving like them a drop of oil, right, but the drop of oil is more of a prop. Right. So I guess the greater question would be, is it your machines? Or is it you, Tom? Who through your machines are curing people? Right? Yeah, Tom Paladino 17:26 I would say it's, it's, it's God's energy. This is what I've discovered about scalar energy. I don't claim any healing ability myself, I believe what I've tapped into scalar energies, the divine energy, what? consciousness or or the gift of the Holy Spirit. I know people have holy healing hands, holy hammer, if you will, right. That's pure energy hands. So what I'm working with in and of itself is a healing property. scalar energy is a healing property. And when I send that scalar energy to a photograph, although it's symbolic, it nonetheless seems to have a healing property. Brandon Handley 18:07 Right, right. Right. I mean, look, if it's working, I'm more of the I don't care how it works kind of guy. I mean, if you come up to me, and you cure me, like, I remember, who was it, it was the Wayne Dyer, you know, talking about crystals, right? And he's like, Listen, if I've got a if I've got hemorrhoids, right, and you told me that I sit on this crystal chair over here, and it's gonna cure my hemorrhoids, and I go sit on that crystal chair. Why wouldn't I? Right, right. Just like so just like this, if you've got if you've got a virus. And and let me go back to how quickly how much time does somebody need to be in treatment for that cure to occur? Tom Paladino 18:52 what I've seen, it only takes one day, one session, one treatment of a photograph, because everything in this scalar realm is instantaneous. There is no time lag. Right? So all action is instantaneous. Brandon Handley 19:07 And I know we haven't gotten to this part yet, but I mean, how much would it cost me today? If I wanted to sign up and get one day treatment? Tom Paladino 19:19 Sure. We we break this down by 30 day sessions, our least expensive is $89. It's a ongoing session. And it's it we break it down into 30 day calendar days, if you will, right. And a lot of people opt for that because it's inexpensive. If they feel comfortable, it does enhance their spiritual, mental and physical well being I have to you know, accentuated This is also a spiritual emotional and mental uplift if you will. We see great results spiritually and cognitively. Brandon Handley 19:58 Right. Let me when you when you talk about about dealing with divine energy. You got it? I mean, innately right there. It's spiritual, right? Like, I mean, there's Is there a Is there something required from DICOM patients clients? What do you call, Tom Paladino 20:16 I call them subscribers. Appreciate that, because they're not patients. This is not Western medicine. I'm trying. I've tried so hard to distance myself from Western medicine, not that I don't believe in western medicine. But by virtue of the fact, I have nothing to do with Western medicine or Newtonian physics, Brandon Handley 20:36 but it's a whole different paradigm. Tom Paladino 20:37 Exactly. It's a whole different paradigm. So I don't want to compare myself, or latch on to some certain buzzwords where it's confusing. Brandon Handley 20:46 Right, right. You also mentioned to the the idea of comparing the apples to apples and apples oranges. If I had to, though, what would the electromagnetic comparison beads to be able to weigh this thing out? Right? I mean, because look, if if I just made you off the streets, Tom, and I'm not like I'm and I'm not Captain spiritual, which I, which I already am, right? And I'm already a believer, like, it doesn't take much for me, but like for the non believer, like, what can how can how can we compare this? How can we help them to see that? The what's the benefit in it for them? Tom Paladino 21:23 It's tough. Let me let me frame it this way. All energy begins initiated from the stars that scatter energy, it's a double helix. And then when that energy breaks down, are converts into electricity and magnetism, that's an inferior, that's a substandard energy. So if it's like Grade A or a Grade B, what do you want in life, I prefer grade eight energy, which is scalar energy, which is the primal energy of the universe, whereas electricity and magnetism is a derivative, a derivative of scalar energy, and it's inferior. Why work with gray? b? Why work with the inferior energy? I don't want to hate grade v. Brandon Handley 22:07 So yeah, man, like, I mean, talk to me a little bit more about the journey, though, into it, right, like, so you got your parents that are kind of just believers are not necessarily just believers, but they're like, there goes Tom, right, with a scaler. You know, turning this into a career you've got, you've got an actual practice, as it were, you've got an office, you've got, you know, you run a business, right? So I gotta imagine there's some business loans here, there. There's, you know, some some people that you're trying to hire. And you know, there's some conversations and what Tom Paladino 22:41 is some of that like, because I'm curious if it's the necessary component, if you're going to bring this out to the, to the public, I've been at this now for 40 years, I've only had a public website for 10 years. So the previous 30 years, I was acquired researcher, and I enjoyed that. But there's only so much you can do. So I said to myself, in order for me, really, to get this out to the general public, I have to demonstrate something that's going to help people I have to prove it. And that's why I brought the website on. Otherwise, I would continue being a quiet, not unrecognized researcher. Well, to answer your question, after 10 years, it has been quite laborious, a website, hiring people advertising, although I enjoy it, nonetheless, a podcast every other day. All of this is an effort, and it's time consuming. And this is what has to be done. Now, and again, I'm one of the few scalar energy researchers out there. So this is quite a novel topic to most people. So again, I'm leading the I'm at the vanguard of this movement, but just a few people. Brandon Handley 23:53 So what's what's that space look like? Right now? How many people are invested in this? across the world? Tom Paladino 24:04 I see a growing awareness to answer your question. It's a growing awareness. How intrinsically involved are people that's that's hard to say. But at least I see a growing awareness and what the next five to 10 years should experience should be really hyper growth or or people should at least become aware of this to the point that it should be a household word in the next 10 to 20 years. So we still have a lot of growth to go, but the tough part is over. I can I can see that. You know, we are riding the wave, there is a wave now finally. Brandon Handley 24:40 Well, you know, I guess the other question, too, would be you know, you brought up Tesla who was a Marconi, who's your Marconi. Tom Paladino 24:50 I admire tests. I admire all scientists, but nobody can hold a candle to test them. I studied what I mean Brandon Handley 24:57 by that, right. So you remember like Marconi was the guy that It took a took the radio wave patent or the wireless technology patent, basically. And Tesla had already kind of figured it out. Like, there's got to be somebody else out, there's kind of maybe they're not stealing your stuff. But like, who would you say your peer is out there? Do you have a peer, Tom Paladino 25:15 I don't think I have a peer at least I haven't seen it quite yet. I don't mean to be condescending, but it's so hard to invent these instruments, control them, and then to be able to administer this energy. You know, I always give people that analogy. Now, a couple 100 years ago, we knew that there was electricity, we would get a static discharge, but from a static discharge to controlling and harnessing electricity and a conduit in a in a home environment, and to be able to control it without hurting yourself that that could took some doing so that that, if you will that timeline was a rather protracted timeline? Brandon Handley 25:58 No, you're right. I like it. I like in this type of energy to once you kind of tap into this divine source, right, very similar to what you say you can use it improperly. And you can do a lot of damage to yourself, how have you been able to harness it and focus it for for good? Yeah. What was that process like for you? Tom Paladino 26:24 Like anything, this is a tool and the tool can be used for good or evil. And I'll start off by saying that. So what do I do with these instruments, I have a a pro forma, I have a technique and I never deviate from it. And the technique that I've developed is, is help the getting it it is it does enhance our help our quantum help. And that's the key to follow those parameters and stay within those parameters. Tessa sometimes would prefer to scatter energies, the ability to eliminate the world he considered it radiant energy, and he was going to provide free energy for mankind. So his instruments were much stronger than mine. And, and some people think that the military tried to persuade him to develop this for for the sake of weaponry. I don't know how far that went or, or if Tesla ever shared any information. But that's the potential here. This energy is so strong, and it's a fundamental primal force in nature. This could be one heck of a weapon. Brandon Handley 27:35 Right, right. Yeah, if if I think some of the stories or documentaries that could be believed, like as soon as he died, right, like that his hotel room gets raided, and all the information is taken out. Right, right. The date, I gotta imagine that I got to imagine too. I'm not a super conspiracy theorist. Guy, but you know, it was him and Gosh, who's the other guy? Westinghouse. Edison, right, like the rivalry that was going on? And, and, you know, big business, if you're giving out free energy to everybody. I mean, what's that gonna do to all these other people that, you know, are kind of counting on right. And this is a monopoly era to where it's like, right that that was going on? Tom Paladino 28:20 Yes, yes. And as the story goes, JP Morgan was a one time financier for Tesla. And according to the story, once, once Morgan understood that Tesla had a free energy device, that ended their relationship. He never got a penny again from Morgan. Brandon Handley 28:40 Yeah, what a shame, what a shame. Um, you know, so much so much to dive down into about him. So I think some other questions I would have to a big part of this podcast is really, you know, kind of facing some of what you've had to face yourself already is kind of coming out with like, some of these non traditional beliefs and stepping into them, right, you open this up with one of those types of things where, like, you know, you surround yourself with positive energy and kind of move yourself forward through that. And you know, a lot of a lot of good things can happen for you. You did mention your children, how old are your children? Tom Paladino 29:17 I have two stuck kids 30 and 31. Brandon Handley 29:21 How do they How do they How are they with this for you? Tom Paladino 29:26 They're fine, they understand it? Because they see that I'm grounded on a fairly grounded person. I'm not up to the clouds, and they see the merit and they realize that this is a scientific process. Now they've seen the laboratory. So this this is not, if you will, anything but a scientific approach. No, Brandon Handley 29:48 I mean, great. And I love that. So have they, at any point, like tried to join you with the studies or anything like that? Tom Paladino 29:56 No, and I'll tell you why. For one glaring reason I don't mean to be condescending to anybody. There's no money in this. There is no career. Brandon Handley 30:07 We not an interest or cure a cure for the whole world. And there's no money. Tom Paladino 30:12 No, no. As as of right now, no, I, I live hand to mouth rankly. And it's amazing how this is suppressed technology. Let's let's just cut to it. And if what I'm saying is true and accurate. Well, you would think that responsible parties from the government, academia, to corporations to think tanks would approach from not one, Unknown Speaker 30:39 not one. Have you tried to approach any of them? Tom Paladino 30:43 Yes, yes. And there's no interest. Unknown Speaker 30:47 There's no way Tom Paladino 30:48 to cut to the chase so many. And I'm not pointing out any specific government corporation or individual, but so many people are in lockstep with the status quo? Yeah, I Brandon Handley 31:01 mean, there's the status quo, right, don't deviate from the norm. You know, that's kind of the old, old school, tribal, you know, scarcity, get thrown out of the getting thrown out of the tribe mindset. Right? If you if you deviate from from the norm. Do you have like, what the typical reason? I mean, I gather not interested but like, what do they say? They just say that that can't be real. There's no way Why would we do that? Like, what is the response? Tom Paladino 31:31 Most people look at my results, I'm results driven, I believe in performance. And after they look at my results in performance, they usually, they usually keep their mouth shut, because they know that that there is performance, and they know that this is just not hyperbole, but they don't want to help. You know, in general, people and entities do not want to help me, because it's against the status quo. And this is a threat to the establishment. I can't stress this enough, scanner energy is going to make obsolete many of the existing monopolies. And what I'm doing is such a threat to those who have this monopolistic control over society. Brandon Handley 32:16 Have you had anybody tried to, you know, kind of any such suppression, like, you know, just kind of like people trying to steal your equipment or break into labs kind of software? Like now I'm now I'm all in like, I'm just kind of like, you know, what can be happening? Because, like, you're saying, like, this is a technology that, you know, it's taking you years to build? I imagine that if somebody breaks in and, you know, messes with instruments that that's kind of set you back? Yeah, yeah. Tom Paladino 32:43 But I have to rely upon God's help. And you know, I can't stress this enough. I'm, I'm alone, there is no second scatter energy researcher, there is no research term. You're looking at the research term, team. Brandon Handley 32:57 Yes. I mean, God. So what do you mean? How are you going to propagate it? Right? How are you going to make sure that it enters Tom Paladino 33:06 your right? I'm 61 years old, and I don't have a there is no protege. Nobody shows any interest in this. So the world has to embrace this within the next 20 years? Because I don't, I don't I don't know if I'll be around much longer. So with that in mind, this is the challenge. And I just take this day by day, it's all in God's hand. Brandon Handley 33:34 So what if I don't know what somebody is listening to us today? And they're like, Hey, I'm totally interested in becoming a protege. I'm totally interested in becoming an understudy. Are you open to stuff like that? Tom Paladino 33:45 I am with this caveat. You have to be financially secure, there's no money in this. I'm gonna repeat that there's no money. Remember to you have to be willing to study, perform independent study for 1020 years before before you really understand this? How many people are financially stable, or perhaps well to do and want to spend the next 20 years laboring with a science that's not recognized that might not pay any dividends? After 20 years of research? Very few people want to make that commitment. Brandon Handley 34:26 is tragic. Right? Given given, given what you're saying and you've proven it can do that there's nobody else kind of willing to pick up and carry that torch with you. finance it or anything like that. That's, I mean, to me, that's, to me, that's mind boggling. Because we go back and you talked about the people getting cured from HIV, there's no news flashes. There's no you know, anything like that. There's nobody publicity like who's I mean, have you reached out to newspapers and anything like that what's happening there? What are the No, Tom Paladino 35:04 they don't believe it. It goes against their grain. And he you have to consider many of these media outlets. They're funded by Big Pharma. They're funded by big oil. They're they're in bed with with big government now. Brandon Handley 35:21 So what keeps you doing man? Well, what Tom Paladino 35:24 do I tell people just just help get the word out? It's all grassroots. And you know, we've got some of the greatest technology in the world. It should be headline is it's not, it won't be. It'll all be grassroots. And that's why I appreciate your platform. Brandon, I appreciate what you're doing. That's what it's gonna take grassroots. Brandon Handley 35:44 Yeah. I mean, it's just a different way of thinking. said it's possible. Right? And why not? I mean, the real question is, why not? Yes. Right. And if you're, if you're, if you've got studies and proofs and theorems, I mean, why not? That's, that's what's killing me. So, yeah, definitely a lot of fun. I'm sure we could probably, you know, go all over the all over his face with it. Um, let me help me. Um, so, one thing I was thinking about, right, as we're doing these, I almost think about these kinds of podcasts is as like, speed, dating, speed dating space, right? Like, you know, there. That's probably what it is, right, Tom? I mean, you know, somebody tunes in maybe they catch one or two words, eating somebody, whoever's picking up the podcast. Today, they're dating Tom palatino. Right. You know, so if we're, if we're going to speed date or something like that, what is, you know, find my questions, because I've got some and just top of mine, like, what's religion getting wrong today? Tom Paladino 36:51 I think this the centerpiece of any, any religious movement should be love. And I'm sure there's problems in the bro. But if you keep it positive, you're gonna get over many of those problems. Let's face it, most of the problems in the world or man created, we've created these problems. So I see the problems in the real, what do I try and do I try and pray every day, I try and pray for world peace, I treat people fairly. And I try always have a productive day. As a researcher, I do my part. And I always reach out and and I'm working with people that the indigent around the world, I'm providing free sessions, because you know, the people in India that we spoke about, they don't have a dime to their name. So you have to give back to society. And there has to be a new way of living. And money should not be the common denominator. It's a shame that it's the common denominator. Brandon Handley 37:49 No, I agree. I agree. One of the thoughts. And it's interesting, we have interesting conversations here at the house. Because my wife and I, we have new kinds of different upbringing backgrounds, right. And as I've grown older and older, the more I realized that we don't work, shouldn't be working, to earn money to be working to either kind of, you know, towards a meaning or purpose or adding value, right? And if I am at a job earning money, and it's a job that I don't love, then basically I should be looking at that as a paid internship, what can I learn at that job that I could use later in life? Right? to to do well, let's do one or two more questions of just kind of, you know, General, General stuff, you know, so what I was asking about in terms of, you know, bringing this to the forefront and talking about, you're sharing this information with your family. First, there's got to be some fear in there, right, that you were able to overcome and sharing that with them. Right. So Tom Paladino 38:56 here, I have brand new, I have no fear because I've been around the block one many times I could care less what people think. Brandon Handley 39:06 What what what does everybody else so afraid, often? Tom Paladino 39:11 You know, sadly, this is a world that that depends on a conventional approach, conformity, and a lot of people don't realize they're conforming to something that's wrong. The paradigm is broke. Look at the world. There's a lot of brokenness. There's a lot of tragedy in the ropes, stop doing the wrong things. If it's not working, we need a new approach. If the model is broke, is broke. Try a new approach. Stop conforming. What is wrong? If it's wrong, stop it. Unknown Speaker 39:45 Tom, if I'm conforming, how do I know what's wrong? Tom Paladino 39:48 Well, you judge that by the results, obviously, you judge that by the results, you know, I have a very wonderful charmed life. I have a very productive life. I always Look to improve it, but I know that I'm on the right path. Because it works. I'm not in misery. I'm very happy. If I was miserable, that I would change something for the better, right? Brandon Handley 40:12 Yeah. One of the things is not everybody's gonna see the video, I'm definitely gonna share the video out on certain platforms. But if you're not able to watch the video with Tom and I today, Tom, how do you again, Tom Paladino 40:25 I'm 61 years of age, Brandon Handley 40:27 man, you guys, I really want to look as good as Tom at 61 I'm just I'm just saying you know, Tom Tom, you got you got fresh skin, you've got like, You're, you're not sagging, you're not falling apart, you look like you're enjoying life. And I could only aim can only aim to, to get to that point, I'm going to tell you, for you, Tom Paladino 40:47 I'm going to tell you a secret there. With scalar energy, I can assemble nutrients. So 22 hours a day, I have a process where I can create assemble nutrients, vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, my body is slowed down my aging process significantly. That's why I look this this way at age 61. I don't have sagging skin. Brandon Handley 41:12 The the and that goes back to what scalar energy is is destructive energy. Is that correct? That's right. Correct. And, and so just by saying that, when you receive that energy that is instructive, creative force energy entering your body saying, we're gonna need, you know, we're gonna need like 99 sets of B, we're gonna need X, Y, Z of C and E and deliver these to Tom today. Is that is that, you know, a fair thing to say? Tom Paladino 41:42 I I'm not suffering from the free radical damage that other people are. Because I'm under the care of scalar. All day long. Brandon Handley 41:52 Nice. Nice. Love it. What is our greatest distraction? Tough? Tom Paladino 42:00 It's hard. that's a that's a singular approach for everybody. I think I think with many people that their greatest distraction is they don't concentrate on themselves. If you just cut that make them selfish. Well, no, I wouldn't say so. I'm not I'm not excluding mankind, but try and do your best. And don't try to extrapolate too much to the road. You can't control the road. Trying to make you try to make yourself and your family happy. I see the misery around the road. All I can do granted is pray for that. I take care of my wife, I take care of my, the people that I work with through scatter energy. That's my reach. That's all I can do. And that's my focus. Sure, I see the unrest in our country. Okay, I see that the the fighting I see the, the racism, all I can do is pray for that. Brandon Handley 42:59 You mentioned pray a few times. Tom, are you? Are you a Christian? Are you nondenominational or? I mean, Tom Paladino 43:08 I'm a Christian, by the way, I believe prayer is the analog to just give them in other words, my instrument is the scientific analog to prayer. Brandon Handley 43:20 Yeah. Look, I mean, it's like you said though, right. Like, you know, and I don't bring that up to to question. Any type of like, you know, is this tom tom stuff only works for Christians, right? Cuz clearly it doesn't, you know, you're, you're directing this at anybody who's open and receptive to it. And I think that, I think that it'd be great if they're, you know, I guess more Christians like Utah, right. More people in the world that are that are that practice their religion? Right. Right. embrace their religion and and appreciate everybody else for who and what they bring to the table as they as they are. Right? Um, anything that Oh, yeah, I mean, so yes, you do a 30 day but if I went to your website today, could I get a trial of scaler? Tom Paladino 44:09 Yes, yes, we we offer 15 days of free sessions to everybody you visit a website you can your entire family will be treated for free. No questions asked. We do that because of my humanitarian proclivity, I want to help people. website is scaler, light, calm visit. Upload your photographs. Remember, we work with you by way of your photograph, all you have to do is email us your photograph. Brandon Handley 44:36 And this includes pets. Unknown Speaker 44:37 Yes, very good. Brandon Handley 44:38 Yes. Yes. So this includes pets as well. And I think for this, I think it's remarkable that you're offering it for 15 days. It's kind of what I alluded to earlier in the conversation is if, if some of these things can be cured in one time in one session, who sounds like if it's me on the streets or anywhere you And I'm tuned in worst thing that could happen is that it takes me about five to five minutes to log into the website, enter the information, subject myself to cosmic energy and potentially be cured of viruses is that I mean, is that the worst case scenario here? Tom Paladino 45:21 That that's it sounds simple. This is it's deceptively simple. It's so simple people saying that can't be that easy. Yeah, Brandon Handley 45:29 no. Well, look, I mean, so I would have to say that anybody listening today that if you don't have it, the very least try this out for yourself today. You can be very remiss, right? I mean, because chances are in the same time today, somebody is going to go, you know, I know I've already bought something off Amazon today, right? Somebody is gonna go check prices somewhere else on something else. You could be cured of whatever ails you. There's a possibility than why wouldn't you do it? So, Tom, man, I really I really enjoyed this conversation. It's really been a pleasure to hop on here and connect with you. Thank you so much for being on the podcast today. Tom Paladino 46:10 Thank you for the opportunity. I enjoyed myself. Transcribed by https://otter.ai
What does audio drama do that other forms of art and media can't? How does it do it? What's the recipe for doing it? Join Sarah and Lindsay on a field trip as they try to find that mysterious element that makes audio drama meaningful and special. Warning and/or Bonus: Spoilers for Can You Help Me Find My Mom, The Truth podcastResources: Phila Museum of Art's Duchamp GalleriesMarcel DuchampNude Descending A StaircaseFountainThis is Your Brain On Podcasts (Freakonomics Radio, ep 262)Sight Unseen, by Elissa Guralnick (affiliate link)An Artist Descending A Staircase, Tom Stoppard (affiliate link)Fidget, 11th Hour Audio ChallengeU+1f60c by James T. GreenPMHx by James T. GreenSubscribe or Follow us, so you can be sure to hear all the episodes. Tell us what you think on Twitter, at @adwitpodcast. Like what you heard? Write a review, at Podchaser, or Apple Podcasts. Or, write to us, at writersadwit@gmail.com. Avanti!Image: This is an anonymous clinical image provided by Aaron G. Filler, MD, PhD. The patient has signed a release for use of the anonymized image for educational, research, and teaching purposes. The image was converted from DICOM acquisition format into jpeg format, anonymized, and posted by Dr. Filler. It is intended for GDFL licensure for reuse for academic, scientific, educational uses without further permissions. Attribution to Aaron Filler, MD, PhD is requested.
Disculpa que sea tan directo… ¿tienes alguna deuda? Si me dices que no, te admiro. En Chile las deudas generalmente aparecen en el Directorio de Información Comercial, Dicom, un registro actualizado sobre información financiera perteneciente tanto a personas naturales como a empresas. Y… ¿estás en los registros de Dicom? ¿O estuviste pero ya no? Dado que no nos queda otra que lidiar con Dicom es mejor aprender a conocer su funcionamiento. Para ello saludamos a la profesora del curso Finanzas Personales de la Academia de Emprendedores, Romina Capetillo, para esta clase de hoy enfocada en el mundo "Dicom" Academia de Emprendedores Con Leo Meyer MATRICULA GRATIS EN tinyurl.com/soyadem Acá puedes apoyar nuestra labor: tinyurl.com/yoapoyoadem
פודקאסט מספר 404 . . . ואוו, אנחנו ב-400-ים, וזה Not Found 404 . . . כן, הולכת להיות לנו כאן סדרה ארוכה ומתישה של 400-ים . . . אז - פרק מספר 404 של רברס עם פלטפורמה! התאריך היום הוא התשיעי במרץ אלפיים-ו . . . בפעם שעברה אמרתי 2001, לא? (אורי) 2021, אם זכרוני אינו מטעני . . . (רן) 2021 - ואנחנו, כרגיל, באולפנינו הקט אשר בכרכור, מולי נמצא אורי - (אורי) אהלן, וזה שבוע האישה הבינלאומי, אגב - (רן) שבוע שמח! ושלום טל מחברת Armis - ברוכה הבא!טל רביד באה לדבר איתנו על Security ובאופן יותר ספציפי על Network Protocols ו-Security, ולפני שנצלול לעסק - ספרי לנו טל: מי את, מניין באת ולאן את הולכת?(טל) אז אני טל רביד, כמו שציינתם, בת 32 מתל אביב - במקור מרחובות, אבל אני חושבת שתל אביב השפיעה עלי מספיק בשביל לקרוא לעצמי “תל אביבית” כבר.בשלוש וחצי השנים האחרונות אני עובדת ב-Armis - סטארטאפ בתחום ה-Security שתיכף נרחיב עליו.לפני זה הייתי במגוון רחב של תחומים - במקור מ-8200, יש לי 7 שנים בערך בקהילת המודיעין, כשצוברים כל מיני סוגי ידע שמתקשר באופן כזה או אחר לסייבראחרי כמה פרקי קריירה בתחומים שונים חזרתי קצת לעולמות של סייבר, ובשנים האחרונות בעצם הקמתי את התחום של הדאטה ב-Armis, שאצלנו הוא כולל ממש היכרות עם ה-Knowledge base של החברה, עם כל הדאטה והלוגיקות.ובין השאר גם עם חוקים שקשורים ל-Security ול-Network Protocols.(רן) מעולה - אז אני מניח שלא מעט מהמאזינים שלנו מכירים את Armis, אבל לאלה שלא, ספרי לנו קצת מי זו Armis? מה אתם עושים שם?(טל) אז Armis קיימת כבר חמש ומשהו שנים, כשהחזון הגדול של החברה הוא לייצר Agentless-Security - בעצם לאפשר להגן על רשתות מבלי באמת להתקין Agent על המכשירים בסביבה.אנחנו עושים את זה ע”י (א) יצירה של Assets Inventory - מיפוי כל הרכיבים שנמצאים ברשת של לקוח ו(ב) אז, לגבי הרכיבים האלה, להגיד מה הם? האם יש חולשות מסויימות שרלוונטיות? האם הם תחת Risk מסויים? כדי לאפשר ללקוח בעצם לקנפג (Config) ולעדכן אותם.מעבר לזה - האם יש איזשהו . . . אנחנו עושים משהו שאנחנו קוראים לו NDR - במקום ה-EDR, שזה Endpoint detection and response - אנחנו עושים Network detection and response, זאת אומרת - אותה הגנה מפני פריצות ותקיפות והתנהגות זדונית, בתרגום העברי של Malicious, או Suspicious, חשודה.במקום להשתמש ב-Agents בשביל לעשות את הדברים האלה, אנחנו בעצם עושים את זה דרך אינטגרציות עם רכיבי רשת ומידע שמועבר באופן גולמי.(אורי) זאת אומרת שאתם Agent על רכיבי הרשת . . . אני יכול להגיד את זה?(טל) אנחנו לא מתקינים Agents - אנחנו עושים אינטגרציה עם רכיבי רשת או עם תוכנות ברשת(אורי) וזה נותן לכם יתרון ב-Deployment, או שזה גם נותן לכם יתרון ממש ב-Detection שאתם יכולים לעשות ואחרים לא יכולים?(טל) זה נותן הרבה יתרון ב-Deployment - למעשה, אם זה רכיבי רשת אז אנחנו יכולים לעשות RSPAN מ-Switch-ים ובעצם לקבל תעבורה גולמית, או ממש לעשות איזושהי אינטרגציה עם Wireless LAN Controller - הרכיב שאחראי על הרשת Wi-Fi.או, במקרים אחרים, עם כל מיני מערכות שפועלות בדרך על רשת Active Directory - אז אנחנו משתמשים באיזשהו API ומתקשריםאנחנו ממש נמנעים מלעשות דברים יותר מורכבים מזה, בשביל לשמור על Deployment מאוד קצר ופשוט.(אורי) כן, פשוט מעניין אותי איך הדבר הזה עובד, פיזית . . . אתם בעצם מאזינים לתעבורת הרשת כחיצוניים-לה, ונותנים את ההתראות, או מה שצריך?(טל) כן - אנחנו לא נמצאים בתוך הרשת, אנחנו עושים איזשהו RSPAN, בדרך כלל לאיזשהו Collector שנמצא סמוך ל-Switch, אנחנו שמים אותו ליד.ובצורה הזו אנחנו מוציאים את הדברים הרלוונטיים ושלחים חזרה, באופן מוצפן, לענן, לאיפה שהשרת שלנו נמצא.ואז משם, בעצם, אנחנו מסוגלים להציג ללקוח את התובנות וה-Insights שמתוקשרות עם המערכות של Armis, עם ה-Knowledge base שלנו.(רן) זאת אומרת שנקודת ההנחה היא שהתוקף, או הפעילות החשודה, עוברת ברשת - אני מניח שזה טרוויאלי, כי כנראה שזה כמעט תמיד ככה . . .(טל) כן - בהנחה שיש תוקף חיצוני כלשהו, בהנחה שהתוקף לא מגיע מתוך המערכות שלך ושם USB בתוך אחד המחשבים של העובדים שלך, אז תיהיה איזושהי הגעה מתוך הרשת.לרוב היא תוסווה, ובעצם המטרה שלנו היא להשתמש בכל מה שאנחנו מסוגלים לתתהדוגמא שהכי קל לדבר עליה - הרבה פעמים שואלים אותנו “אבל ה-Firewall לא אמור לעצור את כל הדברים ברשת? איך תדעו?” - אז הרבה פעמים דברים קורים לפני שה-Firewall יודע שמדובר באילו-שהם Domains שהם אסורים לגישה או שהם חשודים או בעייתיים.ואז הם בעצם ניגשים להבין את הפרופיל של המכשירים שנמצאים על הרשתבעבר זה משהו שהיה מאוד . . . אני לא אגיד ש”פשוט” כי זה עולם מורכב ואני לא רוצה לזלזל בכל מי שמתעסק ב-Security, אבל בעולמות של היום, כשיש לך גם מחשבים, גם סלולריים גם, במשרד רגיל היום, אם אתם זוכרים איך נראה משרד רגיל, אז יש בו גם מצלמות אבטחה וטלפונים ומדפסות ו-VOIP-ים וכל דבר כזה.וקל וחומר כשמגיעים באמת לארגונים או מערכות שמשתמשות, ממש על בסיס יומיומי, ברכיבים שנקראים IOT, במובן הרחב שלהם - אם זה Industrial IOT, אם זה פסי ייצור, בין אם זה מעליות בבניין, שזה Management systems, ובין אם זה בבתי חולים, שזה האולטרסאונדים והרטנגן שמשתמשים בהם - כולם היום מחוברים לאינטרנט, והם משתמשים ברשתות - ומכשירים כאלה הרבה יותר קשה לנטר אותם אם אתה לא יודע מה הם ואתה לא מבין מה ההתנהגות הרצויה שלהם.(אורי) דיברת קודם על Firewall וכאלה - זה לא Firewall שמנסה לחסום Ports כדי שלא תיהיה גישה פנימה, אבל הוא הרבה פעמים ירשה יצירת Connection החוצה - ונראה לי, אם אני מבין נכון, שחלק ממה שאתם עושים זה פעם (Once) שמישהו יצר קשר החוצה, עכשיו על ה-Connection הזה יכול להכנס Malicious traffic בלי בעיה - ואתם תראו אותו, אבל Firewall לא יראה אותו.(טל) זה גם נכון, למרות שכל רכיב רשת שהוא, בין אם זה IOT וכו’ - הם לא ייצרו קשר “סתם” החוצה, חייב להיות משהו שייגרום להם לעשות את זה.באופן קצת מצחיק, עדיין אחוז מאוד ניכר מהמתקפות היום מגיע מ Phishing, או מ-Spear Phishing, שאנשים פשוט לוחצים.אבל הרבה גם מגיע מסריקות חיצוניות - מאילו-שהם מכשירים, שיש להם Port פתוח גם לתקשורת החוצה וגם לתקשורת פנימה.עלה לי לראש “מדפסת”, פשוט בגלל שקח לדוגמא מדפסת של HP - אחת לכמה זמן היא כנראה תתעדכן מול השרתים של HP, ואם אני איש IT, אז אני צריכה לקנפג (Configure) את Firewall, וצריך לתת לה איזושהי יציאה מסויימתבוא נניח ש . . . - אם זו מדפסת או Security camera או מה שזה לא יהיה - אז בוא נניח שאיש ה-IT שלך מאוד יסודי, ויודע על כל אחד מהרכיבים שלו בדיוק מה הם, ולהרשות את ה-IP עם ה-Port הרלוונטי הספציפי שצריך להתעדכן, שזו גם קצת הנחה שהיא Far-fetched - גם אם הוא עושה את זה, האם הוא יודע בדיוק מה ה-Domain הספציפי שמתעדכן? כי גם הוא משתנה . . .לכן מגיע הפתרון שלנו, שאומר - “רגע, אני יודע שזה לא IP ו-Mac כלשהו, שאם שמים על הרשת, אני יודע שזו מדפסת”.לכן, המדפסת הזו מיוצאת ליותר מ-Domain אחד ובחודש האחרון - לא יודעת, אם הפרופיל שלה כל הזמן התעדכן, כל חודש או משהו כזה, ואני רואה איזשהו שינוי בהתנהגות - אז בגלל שהיא מדפסת, אני יודעת להגיד שזו חריגה.ואני יודעת או לשלוח את החוקים ל-Firewall או ממש להתריע בפני הצוות ולהגיד “תראה, יש עכשיו התנהגות חשודה ברשת, שים לב ל-IP הזה ולמה הוא מתנהג ככה”.(אורי) כן, במיוחד אם הצנטריפוגות שלך מתחילות ל . . .(טל) כן, זה משהו שרצוי לעצור . . .(רן) אז איך בעצם עובד מחקר כזה? אתם צריכים ללכת וממש להכיר כל פרוטוקול של כל מדפסת או כל ציוד IOT? איך בכלל מתחילים על כל הסיפור הזה?(טל) זו שאלה טובה . . . כמו שאתה יכול לתאר לעצמך, זה יכול להיות קצת סיזיפי לפעמים, אבל באמת ההתחלה הגיעה מהפרוטוקולים היותר גדולים, שרוב הרשתות משתמשות בהם ורוב מכשירי ה-IOT, באיזושהי רמה, ישתמשו בהם.אתם יכולים לתאר לעצמכם - HTTP ו-DNS ופרוטוקולים שקשורים ל-Registration לרשת - DHCP ו-CNP וכו’.ולאט לאט התחלנו משם, ועוד ועודבעצם, Armis עצמה היום יושבת על כמה Industries שונים, שזה אומר שאנחנו צריכים להחזיק הרבה אנשים שמכירים פרוטוקולים של רכיבים שבדרך כלל מתחברים לרשת משרדית - אבל גם את המעליות, וכל ה-Big Management systems וה-Industrial systems וכל ה-Medical . . .אז פשוט - בכל פעם שנכנסנו לתחום חדש, אז יושבים ומתחילים לחקור(רן) אוקיי - אז איך חוקרים? פשוא מסתכלים על הפאקטות (Packets) ומתחילים להבין מה הן אומרות?(טל) אז לפעמים ככה . . . בצורה יותר מתודית בדרך כלל, מנסים להבין מה הם המכשירים הרלוונטיים שמשתמשים בהם וקצת להבין אותם. הרבה פעמים . . .יש כל מיני סוגים - יש ממש לעשות Network research, ממש לראות איך פרוטוקול מסויים עובד, לנתח את הפאקטות (Packets), לראות פקודות מסויימותאם יש לך איזשהו מכשיר אז ממש לראות כל מיני פעילויות שאתה עושה ביום-יום עם המכשיר ולהבין את הפקודות השונות.לפעמים יש תיעוד של הדברים - יש Vendors שמייצרים תיעוד, שאין להם בעיה לשתף אותו.יש תיעוד קיים לפרוטוקולים שהם Open sourceויש מקרים יותר מורכבים . . . של פרוטוקולים ש . . .אני יכולה לתת דוגמא אחת מצחיקה שהייתה לנו, שאחד הלקוחות שלנו, בתחום התעופה - ולמעשה ראינו . . הצלחנו לזהות ברשת שלו “מנעולים חכמים”, כמו דלתות כאלה, כמו שאתם יכולים לדמיין, שאתם מתקרבים אליהן ויש חיישני גישה והן נפתחות.אז בעצם, עבור המקרה הזה אמרנו “בואו נקנה רכיבים דומים וננסה לחקור אותם”, והתחלנו לחקור ולהתעניין באינטרנט . . . [Sirius Cybernetics Corporation?](רן) כשאת אומרת “לחקור ולהתעניין”, אז בואי נראה אם אני מבין את הדבר הנכון - אני מסתכל על איזה Traffic הם מוציאים? מה הם מקבלים? איך הם מגיבים, נגיד, אם אני שולח להם Packet כזו - האם הם פותחים את הדלת? . . .מה המשמעות של “לחקור” בעצם?(טל) כן, זה ממש ככה - אתה רוצה לחבר אותם לרשת, ואז להתחיל לשחק איתם, להפעיל אותם כמו . . . תיכף אני אסביר למה לא רכשנו אותם, אבל אתה בעצם רוצה, לצורך העניין, לחבר מצלמת אבטחה לרשת, לשחק איתה, להזיז אותה, לראות מה היא קולטת, אילו פקודות היא נותנת חזרה לשרת, ואז, בעצם, להבין איך הפרוטוקול עובד - איזה סוג פקודה נשלחת בכל פעם שמתבצעת פעולה, ואיזה מידע עובר עם כל סוג פקודה כזה.(רן) אוקיי - ומה גיליתם? גיליתם משהו מעניין על אותן דלתות חכמות, מנעולים חכמים?(טל) אז את המנעולים החכמים מאוד מאוד רצינו, חשבנו שזה ממש מגניב לראות אותםבעצם, כשהתחלנו קצת לרחרח ולהתקשר למקומות שמוכרים את המנעולים החכמים האלה, בעצם קיבלנו כזה “אוקיי, אנחנו נבדוק בשבילכם”, ויום אחר כך התקשרה מישהי מה-DOD האמריקאי, ובאנגלית מאוד פורמלית ומאוד . . .(רן) זה ה-Department of Defense . . .(טל) כן, ה-Department of Defense . . . “התענייתם ברכישה של מנעולים מסוג כזה וכזה . . .”(רן) “האם אתם אירנים? האם אתם בונים כור?”(טל) בדיוק . . . “לאיזה צורך?”אז אמרנו “לא, רק רצינו לחקור ולראות איך הם עובדים”, ואז היא אמרה “So Don’t . . . ”ולא רכשנו את המנעולים האלה . . . אבל מן הסתם היה הרבה ציוד אחר, שאנחנו בודקים ומנתחים.(רן) היא כנראה לא עברה קורס הסוואה של ה-FBI או של ה-DOD . . .(טל) לא . . . באמת, לפעמים זה מאוד מוזר, התחום הזה.(אורי) בואי . . . ישראלי טוב, דווקא כשאומרים לו So Don’t . . . ” - דווקא קונה.(טל) אני . . . בואו נגיד שהסיפור נחרט, זה עד היום “המכשיר המפוספס” מבחינתי, יום יבוא ונשלים את זה.אבל בסדר - אנחנו כן ישראלים, אנחנו ידועים בתושייה שלנו ועל היכולת שלנו להתמודד עם דברים בכל מיני דרכים . . .(אורי) “חסמו לנו את הדלת החכמה, אז נכנסנו מהחלון החכם, זה לא . . . “(טל) היי! אנחנו Defense - רק מגינים.(רן) אז אוקיי - אולי נדבר על כמה חולשות מעניינות שיצא לך לחקור או להכיר, בפרוטוקולים מוכרים.אני מניח שהרבה מהאנשים פה שמאזינים מכירים את הפרוטוקולים הטיפוסיים - בין אם זה HTTP שהזכרת, DNS או אחרים - ספרי לנו על איזשהו סיפור מעניין שיצא לך לעבוד איתו.(אורי) על איזה פרוטוקול שאף אחד לא שמע עליו . . .(טל) שאף אחד לא שמע עליו? . . .(אורי) לא יודע . . . כמו הפרוטוקולים של קבינט הקורונה . . .(רן) אורי - יש לך טעם קינקי במיוחד היום? . . . לא, אולי נדבר על איזה פרוטוקול מוכר, אבל חולשה מעניינת.(טל) אני חושבת שאחד הדברים היותר מוכרים ומעניינים בהקשר של . . . או שנתחיל שנייה ביותר פשוט -באמת, התחום הזה של מחקר רשת - יש לו את הצד היותר הגנתי, שאנחנו משתמשים בו, ויש גם את הצד ההתקפי.זאת אומרת - אתה יכול לחקור פרוטוקול כדי להבין איך הוא מתנהל ולנסות להגן, ואתה יכול לחקור פרוטוקול כדי למצוא בו באמת חולשות.ולרוב אלו גם שני תפקידים שונים בתוך חברות.אז אני אנסה לתת דוגמא מכאן ומכאן, נשמע הגיוני?(רן) מעולה(טל) אז הצד הראשון הוא באמת הצד ההגנתי יותר, כשהמטרה שלנו פה היא לחקור פרוטוקול, להבין מה אפשר להוציא ממנו - ידע על המכשירים שמשתמשים בו - ומנגד לראות מתי אפשר להשתמש כדי . . . מתי הוא בעייתי.אני אתן לך דוגמא של פרוטוקול שאתה כנראה לא מכיר - כי HTTP ו- DNS הם באמת מוכרים - יש פרוטוקול מאוד מוכר בעולמות בתי החולים, עולמות ה-Medical, שנקרא DICOM.זהו למעשה פרוטוקול של מכשירי Imaging - אולטרסאונד או CT או X-ray - כל התחום הזה בעצם משתמש בפרוטוקול הסופר-עתיק הזה בשם DICOM, שכל המשמעות שלו היא תקשורת בין מכשיר הקצה, למשל האולטרסאונד, לבין איזשהו שרת ייעודי, שנקרא שרת PACS, שהוא בעצם השרת שמחזיק את ה-Images שנשלחים.(רן) זה לא כמו במצלמה אלקטרונית [דיגיטלית]? תמיד יש Folder כזה שנקרא “DICOM”, נכון? זה מגיע מאותו מקום? כשמורידים, נגיד . . אם מכניסים . . .(אורי) DCIM . . .(רן) אה, DCIM . . .(טל) DCIM . . . כן, זה שונה . . . נראה כמו אותם ראשי תיבות דומים, או משהו כזה, אבל לא - DICOM הוא ממש של עולם הרפואה.הוא מאוד מאוד מוכר ובשימוש מאוד רחב - לא ראיתי אף פעם לקוח בתחום שלא היה לו שימוש מאסיבי ב-DICOM . . .(רן) זאת אומרת שאם אני עושה CT או X-Ray או כל מיני דברים כאלה, אז זה כנראה עובר בפרוטוקול הזה לאיזשהו שרת?(טל) כן. אולי יש דרכים חדשות שמנסים, אבל אני עוד לא נתקלתי בהן בכל הבתי חולים שאנחנו עובדים איתם.(רן) שליחים של Wolt? . . .(אורי) אבל הוא נוצר בתקופת ה X-Ray או בתקופת ה-MRI?(טל) בתקופת ה-X-Ray, לחלוטין בתקופת ה-X-Ray . . . (רן) רוצה לומר - Precambrian . . .(אורי) לא - השאלה האם היו בכלל רשתות מחשבים . . .(טל) תראה, X-Ray הוא לא כזה פיתוח של 1920-1930 כזה? או שאני טועה? [1895] אז שם הוא עדיין לא קיים, אבל הוא [DICOM] לחלוטין פיתוח מסוף ה-90s, לדעתי, אם אני לא טועה [1983]. אני לא בטוחה . . .(רן) בתקופה התמימה של הרשתות . . .(טל) כן . . .ולכן - כמו שאתם מתארים לעצמכם - הוא un-encrypted לחלוטין . . . הוא לא מוצפן, הכל עובר בגלוי, הוא ברובו אפילו לא בינארי - הוא ברובו טקסטואלי, שזה גם הבדל משמעותי בין פרוטוקלים, מן הסתםבגלל זה, כששאלת האם יש פרוטוקול שמסתכל על כמה פאקטות (Packets) ומבין מה הם עושים? אז כן - יש פרוטוקולים שהם פשוט טקסטואליים, שמי שכתב אותם פשוט . . .(רן) ואם זו תמונה - איך מייצגים תמונה באמצעות טקסט?(טל) אז תמונה מיוצגת באמצעות . . . בייצוג בינארי של תמונה - אבל גם התמונה היא Un-encrypted, בפיענוח מאוד פשוט אתה יכול להוציא את זה.(רן) זאת אומרת שמי שפיתח את הפרוטוקול יצא מתוך נקודת הנחה שכל מי שיכול להאזין לרשת הוא Trusted, ובעולם של היום אנחנו יודעים שזה לא קיים . . .(טל) בדיוק, לחלוטין - זה ממש מה שקרה.(אורי) או שהוא תכנן על זה שזה לא מעניין אף אחד . . .(טל) כן . . .זה גם יכול להיות, אעפ”י שזה קצת תמים לחשוב שזה לא מעניין אף אחד, הפרטים האלה . . .(טל) ובאמת, אחד הדברים שמתחילת הדרך מהר מאוד הבנו בעולמות של DICOM . . . אגב, זה לא ספציפית רק ל-DICOM, רוב הפרוטוקולים בעולם הרפואה, לצערי, לא מוצפנים ורובם טקסטואליים, ומכילים פרטים מאוד אישיים על כל אחד מאיתנו, כולל שמות, רקע רפואי, גובה, משקל, תעודת זהות, שם של הרופא המטפל - הכל עובר בצורה גלויה.(רן) תראי - לפני עולם המחשוב, הרופאים היו כותבים בצורה קריפטית (encrypted), ואף אחד לא יכול היה לפענח, והכל היה בסדר . . . עכשיו, עם כל המחשוב הזה, כולם יכולים לקרוא בפונט של Miriam . . .(אורי) אני חושב שהם פשוט לא תכננו . . . לא הבינו איך אפשר לקרוא את זה.(רן) אז מה עושים? - אפשר לכתוב את זה באיזשהו IPsec או באיזשהו משהו אחר? לעטוף את זה באיזושהי שכבה שכן מצפינה?(טל) זו שאלה טובה . . . זה חלק, שלמשל, היה מתסכל עבורי - אנחנו רואים את זה, אנחנו יושבים לצד הרשת, אנחנו לא חלק בהאנחנו לא יכולים להצפין, אנחנו בעיקר יכולים לעדכן את בתי החולים שזה מה שקורה ושזה המידע שמועבר.ואנחנו באמת, מהנקודה הזו והלאה, על כל פרוטוקול אומרים איזה סוג של מידע מועבר בו.חשוב להדגיש שאנחנו לא מוציאים את המידע הזה מאף אד מהלקוחות שלנו - זה נשאר ברשת שלהם ואנחנו בכלל לא מעבירים את המידע.(רן) כמו שאורי אמר - את מי זה מעניין? . . .(טל) כן . . . האמת שזה מאוד מעניין - אני יכולה לדבר אפילו על רשת בתי חולים של מדינה כלשהי, שבעבר - אחת הסיבות שהם התעניינו ו-Ultimately באנו עם המוצרים שלנו, הייתה בגלל שהם באמת חוו פריצה משמעותית, מצד מדינה אחרת, אל המאגרים שלהם, לרשת, בעצם.בגלל שכל המידע לא מוצפן והם לא ידעו שיש להם דליפה, הרבה מהמידע דלף החוצה, ובכירים ממשלתיים פשוט . . . Blackmailed, ממש נסחטו.וזה מאוד קשור - פשוט נבע ממידע לא מוצפן וגישה לרשת.(רן) זה מעניין כמעט כמו לפרוץ לחברת ביטוח, נגיד שירביט . . .(טל) נגיד . . .(רן) סתם זרקתי שם . . . אז אוקיי, גיליתם את זה. כולם ידעו שהפרוטוקול הזה הוא לא Encrypted, אז מה . . . העבודה שלכם פה כאילו נגמרה, מה אתם יכולים לעשות פה?(טל) אז זו שאלה טובה . . . בחלק הזה באמת זה קצת מתסכל, בעולמות של ה-Medical- המטרה שלנו הייתה קודם כל, בראש ובראשונה, להבין את הפרוטוקול הזה, להבין איך הוא מתנהל.באיזה שלב מועברים הפרטים הרגישים? ובצורה הזו אנחנו . . .אגב, לפרוטוקול יש באמת איזשהו Association request, וצריך להחזיר אליו, ויש בקשה כזאת, ובקשת Store, ובקשה להעברת Images.כל הדברים האלה הם דברים ברזולוציות מאוד מאוד גבוהות, שאנחנו צריכים להבין ולגלות, כדי לדעת באיזה חלק או באיזו פקודה עובר המידע המוצפן.ואז למעשה אנחנו יכולים . . . אנחנו לא יכולים להצפין אותו ולא יכולים לעצור אותו - אנחנו יכולים לשקף את זה ללקוח שלנו.ואז בעצם, אם חס וחלילה המידע הזה מוזלג החוצה, אנחנו יכולים לבוא ולהגיד ללקוח - “שים לב, המידע המוצפן הזה נשלח לאיזשהו מחשב או מכשיר כלשהו, שנמצא מחוץ לרשת שלך”או אפילו למכשיר בתוך הרשת, שאינו מורשה, Not Authorized.אנחנו מאפשרים ללקוח ממש לסמן את המכשירים שמותר להם לגשת למידע הזה ומכשירים שלא.ואז, בעצם, אנחנו מנסים לפחות To contain - ממש לעצור את זה.(רן) אוקיי, את זה הבנתי, זה ערך מוסף משמעותי - אולי הפרוטוקול עצמו לא בטוח, אבל לפחות אתם יודעים שמישהו ניגש ולא אמור לגשת(טל) בדיוק.(אורי) אני רציתי לשאול לגבי גופי רגולציה - נתת את הדוגמא של מערכות בריאותיות, ויש שם מידע לא מוצפן.האם יש סוגי מערכות, שיש תקינה מסויימת לגבי האבטחה שלהן, וגופי תקינה שנמצאים בקשר איתכם כדי לאכוף את התקנים האלה?(טל) יש הרבה מערכות שיש איזה-שהם גופי תקינה, לצערי . . . בעולמות ה-Medial, אגב, מאוד.לדוגמא, היינו בעולמות הרנטגן - לכל מכשיר רנטגן חדש שיוצא יש איזושהי תקינה, יש מסמך שהוא צריך למלא, כולל שאלות לגבי אבטחה - האם אפשר לשים עליו אנטי-וירוס? האם יש לו אילו-שהן Capabilities בתחום ה-Security?והוא גם צריך לעבור אישור FDA.לצערי, בפרוטוקולים הם לא כל כך בודקים . . . אני לא מכירה, לפחות, איזושהי רגולציה מאוד חזקה על הפרוטוקולים.בדרך כלל, כשאנחנו מתקשרים ללקוחות, הם אומרים לנו “אנחנו יודעים” - ואז אנחנו מראים להם כמה זה נפוץ ברשת והם קצת נבהלים אבל מבינים . . . באמת אין מספיק פיקוח על התחום הזה.קצת יוצאים מתוך נקודת הנחה שבעצם אף אחד לא יצליח לפרוץ - אנחנו מנסים להגן על הרשת של בתי החולים, כדי שאף אחד לא יצליח להיכנס פנימה.אישית, אני חייבת להגיד שזו תפיסת אבטחה שהיא קצת קשה היום . . .(רן) אני מניח, לצורך העניין - רגולציה זה סבבה, אבל היא כנראה נמצאת כמה שנים אחרי התוקפים, ברמה המחשבתית, הטכנולוגית . . .(טל) בדיוק(אורי) זה בסדר - הרגולציה סוגרת פירצה. יכול להיות שהתוקפים נכנסו דרך הפירצה כבר, אבל כדי שזה לא ימשיך אז . . .(רן) אוקיי . . . זה מעניין, אני אחשוב פעמיים עכשיו לפני שאני אעשה . . . לפני שאשבור את היד או אקבל איזה התקף לב . . .(רן) בהכנה לפודקאסט, רשמנו כל מיני שמות של התקפות מעניינות או כל מיני Vulnerabilities מעניינים שאפשר לדבר עליהם, אז בואי נבחר איזה כמה מבין ה - WannaCry וה-EternalBlue או אחרים שאת חושבת שמעניינים ונדבר עליהן.(טל) ודגש על WannaCry וה-EternalBlue . . . אין בעיה, בשמחה.אני חושבת שגם בחרתי . . . באמת, WannaCry הוא אחת התקיפות היותר מוכרות בעולם ה-Cyber ב3-4 שנים האחרונות . . .(רן) נגיד שאני לא מכיר . . .(טל) אני אספר מאפס, אבל באמת - זו איזושהי תקיפה שנתגלתה ב-2017, Ransomware בעצם.יש כל מיני סוגים של Ransomware - יש כאלה שהוא יותר מטורגטים (Targeted), שנועדו כדי להרוויח הרבה כסף ממקום אחד אבל WannaCry הוא באמת Ransomware מאוד רחב, שנשלח להרבה מאוד מקומות, מתוך מטרה לקבל מעט כסף מהרבה מקומות שנתפסו.ו-WannaCry הוא בעצם השם של ה-Ransomware עצמו, כלומר - Ransomware הוא סוג של Malware, שיושב בדרך כלל על מחשבים או שרתים, וכשאתה מפעיל אותו הוא מראה לך כמו איזושהי הודעה כזאת מאוד רעה . . .לפעמים רשום בכתב [פונט] “מרים” מאוד יפה, אבל היא מאוד קשה לעיכול - שבעצם אתה לא יכול לגשת למחשב שלך, אלא אם תעביר כסף . . .(רן) “עשירית Bitcoin - או שכל הקבצים שלך יושמדו”.(טל) בדיוק . . .אז הרעים ביותר הם עם איזשהו Deadline לקבצים שיושמדו, כמו שרואים בטלויזיהלרוב הם די Plain-text עם סמיילי בסוף . . . עוקצני כזה - ואיזשהו ארנק Bitcoin שאפשר להעביר אליו את התשלום.זה היה אירוע באמת מאוד רחב, וזה השם של ה-Ransomware.הוא עשה נזק של עשרות מיליונים ברחבי העולם, ועד היום יש מופעים שלו וקשה להיפטר ממנו.(רן) מעניין אותי האם עושים A/B Testing על הטקסט, על הפונט, על הסמיילי בסוף? . . . לדעת מה יותר אפקטיביוגם על הסכום! הרי בכל פעם שמוציאים מוצר חדש . . (אורי) אל תדאג - בטוח שעושים.(רן) ומה מעניין בו, טכנולוגית? זאת אומרת - איך הוא בעצם פועל?(טל) אני חושבת שמה שמעניין יותר, טכנולוגית, הוא ה-EternalBlue, שזו קצת דרך ההפצה של WannaCryיש כל מיני דרכי הפצה - כשאתה תוקף, יש את הדרך שלך להיכנס, ראשונית, לתוך הרשת - לגרום לבנאדם בתוך הרשת ללחוץ או לקבל את ה-Exert [מפעיל] בצורה ראשוניתלרוב זה נעשה בצורה לא מאוד חדשנית - לרוב WannaCry באיזשהו Spear Phishing - מייל שנשלח ולחצו על איזשהו לינקואז בעצם מה שקורה עם הלינק הזה - אם התוקף עשה את עבודתו נכון, הוא הצליח בעצם לנצל את הפרצה המסויימת במכשיר שהוא ניגש אליו, וניצול הפירצה הזו נעשה על ידי Exert בשם EternalBlue.עכשיו, יש גם עוד כמה סוגים שונים של חולשות שהשתמשו בהן כדי להתקין את ה-WannaCry, אבל EternalBlue הייתה המוכרת בהן.(רן) איך עבד EternalBlue?(טל) EternalBlue השתמש בפרוטוקול SMB, שזה Server Message Block - זה פרוטוקול מאוד ותיק של Microsoft, שאפילו שימש לפני ה- Active Directory כדי לקשר בין שרתים.מה ש-EternalBlue עשה זה ניצל כמה חולשות בתוך הפרוטוקול של SMBאלו כמה חולשות, שהשתמשו אחת בשנייה, אבל בעצם כשאני אומרת “חולשות” זה באגים - דברים שלא עובדים כמו שצריך בתוך הפרוטוקול עצמו.(רן) בפרוטוקול עצמו, או במימושים שלו בתחנות היעד?(טל) למעשה, במסגרת EternalBlue, מה שיכולת לעשות זה להעביר איזושהי פאקטה (Packet) . . . מה שנעשה בפועל זה שנשלחה פאקטה (Packet) שהיא זדונית, מראש היא נשלחה בפרוטוקול SMB,מחשבים שהצליחו לקבל אותה - אפשר היה להפעיל עליהם קוד, וזה היה בעצם הרעיון של ה-Exploit - אתה יכול, באמצעות פאקטה (Packet) אחת, ב-Session אחד, כל עוד המכשיר השני מקבל אותו - ופה קצת מגיע ה”למי יש את ה-Ports הפתוחים של SMB” , אבל בגלל שמדובר באיזשהו פרוטוקול של שרתים אז להרבה מכשירים ישנים . . . למעשה, כמעט מ-Windows 7 ודרומה, וה-Servers המקבילים שלו - כולם פגיעים.ויש גם גרסאות של Windows 10 שעדיין פגיעות אליו.וכולם יכלו לקבל את הפאקטה הזאת, ויכלו להריץ קוד במסגרת השליחה של ה-Exploit, והקוד הזה היה WannaCryעכשיו, Network research זה בדיוק מה ששימש את ההאקרים האלה כדי לתכנן את ה-Exploit - הם ראו כל מיני באגיםזה אומר, למשל, שב-SMB יש לך כל מיני פקודות שאתה שולח - המטרה של SMB זה לקבל הרשאות לקבצים, או לשלוח קבצים להדפסה, כל מיני דברים כאלה.בעצם, בחלק מהפקודות שמעבירות את ה-Meta-data של הקבצים, יש שני סוגים של פקודות, שכל אחד מהם משתמש בשדה, Field, אחר, כדי לציין את גודל ה-Packets שנשלחו.(רן) אז נוצרה אי-תאימות? . . .(טל) בדיוק - הבאג הוא שלא נעשית ולידציה (Validation) - אם אתה משתמש ב-Field אחד אבל שולח סוג אחר . . .(רן) כמעט לכל פרוטוקול היה את הבאג הזה מתישהו . . . היה את זה ל-HTTP, היה את זה ל-TCP, היה כמעט בכל הפרוטוקולים . . .(טל) אז זה ממש היה ב-SMB, והיו עוד באגים קטנים שהם ניצלו אותם.(רן) זו הייתה חולשה ידועה בזמן שכל הסיפור התפוצץ?(טל) אז EternalBlue הוא באמת סיפור מצחיק, כי הסיפור הוא, לפי מקורות זרים, שה-NSA השתמש בחולשה הזאת לאורך שנים, והם לא עשו Disclosure ל-Microsoft אלה השתמשו בו.והוא למעשה דלף להאקרים כשנעשתה דליפה מה-NSA . . . זה הסיפור.ואז בעצם התחילו להשתמש בו באופן רחב, והסיפור הוא מאת Microsoft, שבאמת התלוננו על ה-NSA שלא נעשה פה Disclosure . . .(רן) ומזה יצא קורונה ו-5G וכל השאר . . .(אורי) אבל הוא גם, לפי מה שאת מתארת, כזה פרוטוקול לא מתוחזק . . . זה פרוטוקול ישן, הוא . . .(טל) הוא פרוטוקול ישןה-EternalBlue יצא על מה שנקרא SMB version 1 - היום יש Version 2 ו-Version 3.הם כן תחזקו אותו . . . כאילו - יש פרוטוקולים שהם כל כך מסואבים וכל כך ישנים, ויש להם פשוט הרבה מקומות שאתה יכול למצוא פרצות.אני אוכל לתת דוגמא אחרת מפרוטוקול אחר שהוא טיפה פחות מוכר - זה משהו שעשינו ב-Armis, ע”י צוות ה-Research המעולה שלנוכמו שאמרתי, יש הרבה שחוקרים את הצד ההגנתי ויש כאלה שחוקרים חולשות.אצלנו בארץ, ב-Armis, יש את שניהם - יש צוות Network research מעולה, שעושה כמעט את כל המחקרים שדיברתי עליהם, ויש לנו צוות Research, שהמטרה שלו היא למצוא באמת את הבעיות האלה.הצוות הזה חקר פרוטוקול שהוא קצת פחות מוכר בעולמות האלה כי הוא פרוטוקול Layer 2, שהוא פרוטוקול של Cisco שנקרא CDP, שזה בעצם Cisco Discovery Protocol.כמעט כל המכשירים של Cisco משתמשים בו.הוא נועד במקור לניהול, ל-Management של VoIP-ים, אבל למעשה כל מכשיר של Cisco, כולל הסוויצ’ים, כולל כל מצלמות האבטחה של Cisco, מי שמשתמש בהן - כולם מתקשרים על הפרוטוקול הזה.המטרה של החברה היא לעבור על פרוטוקול שלא כל כך נחקר, ולמצוא כל מיני דברים.במסגרת הפרסום הזה, שנקרא CDPwn, הם מצאו 5 חולשות שונות - ארבע מהן מאפשרות גם Remote Code Execution, שזו הרמה המשמעותית של הפריצה, כי זה אומר שאתה יכול להריץ קוד . . .(אורי) הפגיעה ביותר . . .(טל) הפגיעה ביותר, כי Remote Code Execution אומר שאתה פשוט יכול להריץ קוד על המכשיר.מה שהיה סופר-מעניין ב-Scenario הזה זה שאם עד עכשיו דיברנו על WannaCry, אז WannaCry מתחבר לאיזשהו מחשב, WannaCry עצמו גם יכול היה להריץ את EternalBlue כדי להתרחבאם כבר נכנסת לתוך הרשת אז יש לך גם מנגנון התרחבות, ואז אתה בעצם תוקף את כולם ומפיל את כל הרשת באיזשהו Ransomware.אבל הרבה דרכים להגן על רשתות היום, מה שאנשי IT עושים, זה בעצם לשייך את הרשת ל VLAN-ים שונים, ל-Sub-Networks שונים, כדי להגן בעצם על החומר הסודי שלהם.כלומר - אם אני קוקה-קולה, אז אני שמה את המתכון הסודי ב-Sub-Net אחת וב-VLAN, ולא נותנת לאף אחד לגשת.הרכיבים שיודעים לשלוט על הדברים האלה הם ה-Switches וה-Routers של Cisco, ולכן אם אתה תוקף ויודע לפרוץ את המכשירים האלה ולהריץ קוד עליהם, אתה יכול להפיל את החומות שאתה מייצר בין הסוגים השונים של הרשתות.זה מה שהפך את המתקפה הזאת לעוד יותר מסוכנת.(אורי) מה שאת אומרת זה שלו אני איש IT שמתכנן רשת של ארגון, את רוב הרשת אני אשים על Vendor אחד, ואת המקומות החשובים לי במיוחד אני אשים על Vendor אחר, ככה שפרוטוקולים של Command & Control לא יכולים לעבור בין Vendor ל-Vendor . . .(רן) מה שנקרא Defense-in-Depth, אורי . . . אבל אתה צריך גם שאיש IT שונה יתחזק את אותם [איזורים] . . .(טל) בכנות, אני די בטוחה שהמתכון של קוקה-קולה הוא על איזשהו מחשב יחיד, בודד, שאין לו שום גישה לאינטרנט ויש כמה Firewalls בינו לבין . . . (אורי) או שהוא כתוב בפנקס של Koh-I-Noor ושמור מתחת לאיזשהו מזרן . . .(טל) כנראה, אני מקווה . . . כי זה כנראה . . . לשמור על דאטה רגיש זה באמת קשה, ואם אתה שואל אותי, אז זה קצת קשור בעד כמה שאתה חושב שאנשים ירצו לקחת את המידע הזה.אם טרגטו (Target) אותך, אז זה קשה .הסיפור הכי מוכר של השנה האחרונה, ממש מהחצי שנה האחרונה, הוא הסיפור של SolarWinds, אם אתם מכיריםזו חברת Security בפני עצמה, שלא רק שהצליחו לפרוץ אליה - הצליחו לפרוץ לאחד המוצרים שלה . . .(רן) SolarWinds זו למעשה חברת IT, שמספקת בעיקר Security ללקוחות שלה - והם בעצמם נפרצו - ומשם גם ללקוחות שלהם?(טל) בדיוק(אורי) אני חושב שכשפרצו להם, בעצם לקחו את כלי התקיפת White-Hat שלהם, או משהו כזה . . .(טל) אז לא - מסתבר שממש טרגטו (Target) את SolarWinds, ומה שהם עשו זה ממש פרצו לקוד שלהם.הם ממש נכנסו לסביבת הפיתוח של אחת מתוכנות ה-Security ש-SolarWinds מציעה, והצליחו להוריד גרסא עם Malwareממש לשלוח איזושהי גרסא חדשה, לעשות Build, ניצלו איזושהי חולשת Build שם בשביל להגיע לרשת הזאת, והוציאו איזושהי גרסא - שכל מי שמתקין אותה יכול . . . בעצם “יש להם רגל ברשת שלו”, יש מי שמתקשר איתו החוצה.ואז, חלק מהלקוחות של SolarWinds ומי שבצם פרסם את כל התקיפה הזאת, היו חברת Security בשם FireEye.כש-FireEye פתאום קלטו שיש איזושהי זליגה מתוך ה-Knowledge Base הפנימי שלהם, שכלל מתקפות White-Hat שהם עשו ב-Scanners שלהם, שהם מציעים בעצם לציבור . . .משם כבר הבינו שיש איזושהי דליפה, הגיעו למקור שלה, הבינו שזה מה-Orion, מהמערכת של SolarWinds שהם רכשו - ואז הם פרסמו את זה.למעשה, המון המון גופים, בין אם עסקיים אבל גם לחלוטין ממשלתיים, לרמת ה-FBI ועוד גופים שהשתיקה יפה להם, ממש גילו שיש להם את המערכת הזאת ושמאוד סביר שדלף מהם חומר . . (אורי) אז ההיא מ-DOD התקשרה ואמרה “עכשיו את יכולים”?(טל) עכשיו אנחנו יכולים, כן . . .היא איחרה את המועד . . .(רן) טוב, כן - לא הייתי רוצה להיות SolarWinds במקרה הזה, אבל זה אחלה סיפור ואני בטוח שכולם שמעו עליו.מה שנקרא - לשמור על השומרים.טוב, טל - היה מרתק, תודה שבאת . . . (אורי) אפשר לדבר על זה עוד הרבה זמן(טל) תודה לכם שאירחתם אותי, לכבוד היא לי(רן) בשמחה - להתראות.הקובץ נמצא כאן, האזנה נעימה ותודה רבה לעופר פורר על התמלול
Hacking and scamming incidents are on the rise. It's a sad fact of pandemic life now, but on episode 351 of Geekiest Show Ever, we're here to tell you that you can take back some control if you know what to look out for and how to implement best practices. We believe that online security should be a regular part of our overall well-being. It's why we so frequently discuss security issues and using password managers. Tune in to hear us share our field experience for ways to help your loved ones become safer in our digitally connected world. Follow us for additional tips and conversation on Twitter @GeekiestShow https://twitter.com/geekiestshow Complete show notes are here: https://www.geekiestshowever.com/gse351-locked-down/ Miele-LXIV is a free DICOM viewer for looking at images like MRI or Xray on your computer. Your doctor will either give you a disc or a way to get the images onto your computer, but if the program they provide is not compatible, this is a good alternative. https://apps.apple.com/us/app/miele-lxiv/id988332475 (Mac App Store link) https://dicom.3utilities.com/viewer.php (developer website) Security PSA: Check in with your loved one and have a conversation about their computer use and habits. Ask them to look at the programs installed on their devices and then ask if any of them look unfamiliar. Another good question to ask is if they have ever gotten "assistance" over the computer remotely by someone they didn't know well who told them they could help them get money back. It's an important conversation to have because sometimes the person feels embarrassed and won't mention it. There are so many remote conferencing apps we use now for managing life in a pandemic. While these apps are really helpful and do serve a legitimate purpose, they can be used to exploit us during our most vulnerable times. Think about the patterns that most phishing scams follow: a claim is made that convinces you to act because your money is in jeopardy or there is some information about you that has been revealed and you’re urged to check it out. They are targeting us in areas where we feel the most vulnerable: financial security and reputation. Many times those go hand in hand. The hacker will claim that you’ve been hacked and they are there to rescue you when they are actually the hacker! 1Password Families Review: Both Elisa and I have now converted our 1Password single licenses to the 1Password Families subscription service. We discuss how we got set up and how we're using it with our families. Tips 1. If you're using 1Password for Families with young children or older loved ones who are not yet digitally literate, consider setting up a shared vault with their name on it for them and then make that their default vault in the 1Password app Preferences. To set it up this way, click the Vaults tab in 1Password Preferences then look for the setting that says "Always open to" and change it from Private to their [Name] vault. Where it says "Show in All Vaults" uncheck the Private vault and be sure their [Name] vault is checked. This is where you can also check (enable) the vault that is shared by default with all the members of your family for passwords you want everyone to have access to. If you share your Netflix login, for example, that would be saved and synced in the default Shared vault. Then where it says "Vault for Saving" change that from Private to their [Name] vault. Now, each time your child or family member saves a new password, it will be saved in their [Name] vault and you will also have access to it. If they need help populating the fields, you can make those changes or corrections and it will be synced to their device from yours. Many times in the beginning, people forget to change the signup URL to the login URL and then wonder why they keep ending up on a page that asks them to create a new account. It's understandably confusing! Because you'll have access to their vault, you could locate the correct URL and then enter it for them from your own device. Sharing vaults like this is helpful for those of us who are tasked with being the family's Digital Executor. 2. Be sure to print out your 1Password Emergency kits, but before you do, consider annotating the PDF to include the Master Password. Use a monospace font like Courier (which is available on most systems) that will make the letters and numbers a bit easier to read. Make the text super large so that there's no mistake reading what needs to be entered when it's required. 3. Whenever you're enrolling into an online account for the first time and they ask you to pick security questions, make up silly answers to store in your password manager! They do NOT need to be correct and it's even safer if they are harder to guess because your mother's maiden name is not a hard fact to find out. Check the Apple Security Updates page to see if your Apple gear is up to date. https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT201222 Do you have questions about what you heard in this episode? Please send us your feedback. We'd like to hear from you. Let us know about a tech topic that interests you. Elisa can be found at https://twitter.com/senseidai or https://www.threegeekyladies.com Melissa can be found at https://twitter.com/themacmommy or https://www.themacmommy.com Some of the links in our show notes are referral or affiliate links. We thank you kindly in advance for clicking through so we can earn from sharing reviews that help you become an informed consumer.
Hacking and scamming incidents are on the rise. It's a sad fact of pandemic life now, but on episode 351 of Geekiest Show Ever, we're here to tell you that you can take back some control if you know what to look out for and how to implement best practices. We believe that online security should be a regular part of our overall well-being. It's why we so frequently discuss security issues and using password managers. Tune in to hear us share our field experience for ways to help your loved ones become safer in our digitally connected world. Follow us for additional tips and conversation on Twitter @GeekiestShow https://twitter.com/geekiestshow Complete show notes are here: https://www.geekiestshowever.com/gse351-locked-down/ Miele-LXIV is a free DICOM viewer for looking at images like MRI or Xray on your computer. Your doctor will either give you a disc or a way to get the images onto your computer, but if the program they provide is not compatible, this is a good alternative. https://apps.apple.com/us/app/miele-lxiv/id988332475 (Mac App Store link) https://dicom.3utilities.com/viewer.php (developer website) Security PSA: Check in with your loved one and have a conversation about their computer use and habits. Ask them to look at the programs installed on their devices and then ask if any of them look unfamiliar. Another good question to ask is if they have ever gotten "assistance" over the computer remotely by someone they didn't know well who told them they could help them get money back. It's an important conversation to have because sometimes the person feels embarrassed and won't mention it. There are so many remote conferencing apps we use now for managing life in a pandemic. While these apps are really helpful and do serve a legitimate purpose, they can be used to exploit us during our most vulnerable times. Think about the patterns that most phishing scams follow: a claim is made that convinces you to act because your money is in jeopardy or there is some information about you that has been revealed and you’re urged to check it out. They are targeting us in areas where we feel the most vulnerable: financial security and reputation. Many times those go hand in hand. The hacker will claim that you’ve been hacked and they are there to rescue you when they are actually the hacker! 1Password Families Review: Both Elisa and I have now converted our 1Password single licenses to the 1Password Families subscription service. We discuss how we got set up and how we're using it with our families. Tips 1. If you're using 1Password for Families with young children or older loved ones who are not yet digitally literate, consider setting up a shared vault with their name on it for them and then make that their default vault in the 1Password app Preferences. To set it up this way, click the Vaults tab in 1Password Preferences then look for the setting that says "Always open to" and change it from Private to their [Name] vault. Where it says "Show in All Vaults" uncheck the Private vault and be sure their [Name] vault is checked. This is where you can also check (enable) the vault that is shared by default with all the members of your family for passwords you want everyone to have access to. If you share your Netflix login, for example, that would be saved and synced in the default Shared vault. Then where it says "Vault for Saving" change that from Private to their [Name] vault. Now, each time your child or family member saves a new password, it will be saved in their [Name] vault and you will also have access to it. If they need help populating the fields, you can make those changes or corrections and it will be synced to their device from yours. Many times in the beginning, people forget to change the signup URL to the login URL and then wonder why they keep ending up on a page that asks them to create a new account. It's understandably confusing! Because you'll have access to their vault, you could locate the correct URL and then enter it for them from your own device. Sharing vaults like this is helpful for those of us who are tasked with being the family's Digital Executor. 2. Be sure to print out your 1Password Emergency kits, but before you do, consider annotating the PDF to include the Master Password. Use a monospace font like Courier (which is available on most systems) that will make the letters and numbers a bit easier to read. Make the text super large so that there's no mistake reading what needs to be entered when it's required. 3. Whenever you're enrolling into an online account for the first time and they ask you to pick security questions, make up silly answers to store in your password manager! They do NOT need to be correct and it's even safer if they are harder to guess because your mother's maiden name is not a hard fact to find out. Check the Apple Security Updates page to see if your Apple gear is up to date. https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT201222 Do you have questions about what you heard in this episode? Please send us your feedback. We'd like to hear from you. Let us know about a tech topic that interests you. Elisa can be found at https://twitter.com/senseidai or https://www.threegeekyladies.com Melissa can be found at https://twitter.com/themacmommy or https://www.themacmommy.com Some of the links in our show notes are referral or affiliate links. 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Welcome to the world of medical imaging! Chantel Hopper and Catherine Slotnick from Ambra Health introduce themselves to the podcast community, share how DICOM Dialogues with Ambra Health was born, and give a short introduction to what the podcast will talk about. We can't wait for you to listen along! Check out www.ambrahealth.com to learn more. Follow Ambra Health: Website: ambrahealth.com Twitter: @ambrahealth Instagram: @ambrahealth Facebook: Ambra Health
Authenticated encryption such as AES-GCM or ChaCha20-Poly1305 is used in a wide variety of applications, including potentially in settings for which it was not originally designed. A question given relatively little attention is whether an authenticated encryption scheme guarantees “key commitment”: the notion that ciphertext should decrypt to a valid plaintext only under the key that was used to generate the ciphertext. In reality, however, protocols and applications do rely on key commitment. A new paper by engineers at Google, the University of Haifa and Amazon demonstrates three recent applications where missing key commitment is exploitable in practice. They construct AES-GCM ciphertext which can be decrypted to two plaintexts valid under a wide variety of file formats, such as PDF, Windows executables, and DICOM; and the results may shock you. Links and papers discussed in the show: * How to Abuse and Fix Authenticated Encryption Without Key Commitment (https://eprint.iacr.org/2020/1456) * Mitra, Ange's software tool for generating binary polyglots (https://github.com/corkami/mitra) * Shattered and other research into hash collisions (https://github.com/corkami/collisions) Music composed by Toby Fox and performed by Sean Schafianski (https://seanschafianski.bandcamp.com/). Special Guests: Ange Albertini and Stefan Kölbl.
A Jamiroquai le gustan las cosas largas, ¿cómo se formó la amistad entre Gringo y Pancho?, Gringo tiene una máquina del tiempo y nos contara los detalles sobre este aparato. Sacaran de Dicom a los que tengan alguna deuda educacional, te hablamos un poquito de Raposo y mucho más en este nuevo episodio de “Sacúdete el Covid”. Con Gringo y Panchito. Gracias por escucharnos.
Ayer se conoció por lo menos un decreto sorpresa cuando el “Angelito” que es Willian Pérez Figuereo aseguró que desconocía su nombramiento como subdirector de la OMSA, Rafael Ovalles, director de INFOTEP, dejó de cobrar como subdirector de la DICOM durante cuatro años pero el decreto seguía vigente. Cuando se encuentran esos gazapos en la administración pública una tiene a preguntarse cuantos casos así habrá. O lo que es peor a niveles mas bajos existe esa práctica y hay gente nombrada que no sabe que esta. Que pasó con los sueldos correspondientes a esas posiciones. Paliza dijo al listin que ellos no sabían lo que encontrarían pero que han encontrado de todo.
Today, we are speaking with Dr. Amir Davarpanah, Assistant Professor of Radiology at Emory University. Dr. Davarpanah recently published an article titled Novel Screening and Triage Strategy in Iran During Deadly Coronavirus Disease 2019 and in this episode, we hear about the inventive methodologies it documents. Using Iran as a case study, our conversation is all about creative solutions to the issue of screening for COVID in resource- scarce countries and the value of humanitarian approaches during this time of crisis. Dr. Davarpanah stresses the importance of screening at the earliest stage possible, and we hear his recommendations to doctors as far as being resourceful where resources are lacking. Thanks for joining us for this wonderful opportunity to learn from one of the leading researchers on the COVID pandemic. Enjoy! Talking points: Introducing Dr. Davarpanah and his paper about novel screening processes in Iran. (0:31) Scarce resources in Iran during the crisis leading to their creative screening solutions. (0:55) The role of Iranian sanctions and lessons from China in Iran’s evolving plan. (1:38) PCR test unreliability and how Iran used existing CT scanning infrastructure. (2:05) Bypassing master screening by using early signs of illness as a cue for a CT scan. (3:06) Overcoming the challenge of interpreting chest CT scans using social media. (3:48) Drawbacks of DICOM and the infrastructure of the social media sharing system. (4:20) Collaboration between Iranian/American radiologists leading to high scan amounts. (5:21) What gave Dr. Davarpanah the idea to assist Iran in this way from his home in the US. (5:56) Takeaways for other countries: the need to identify infected people early on. (6:55) Whether CT scans can be of use where resources and PCR tests are scarce. (7:07) Approaches that take resource availability into consideration in fighting COVID. (8:02) The need to find solutions for identifying people that have been symptomless for long. (9:03) Why collaborative, humanitarian efforts are needed to fight crises like this. (10:06) Advice for how young physicians can help, cooperate, and share findings. (11:27) Resources: “Novel Screening and Triage Strategy in Iran During Deadly Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Epidemic: Value of Humanitarian Teleconsultation Service" Journal of the American College of Radiology. 2020 Mar 24. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32167538/
Being able to identify a need or problem in the healthcare industry takes creativity and knowledge. A career on the clinical side helps. And an advanced business degree will send you into a whole new world of insights. But how do those insights help a health innovator navigate today’s disruptive COVID-economy and what might the future hold for an industry that’s stuck on pause? In this episode, we talk with David Pearlstone, CEO of DICOM Director, about his involvement on both sides of the healthcare innovation equation: from the operating room to the boardroom. David speaks with candor and experience as he regales our listeners with insights, tips, and personal anecdotes. Here are the show highlights: How unsatisfied clinicians can regain control of the hospitals and healthcare industry (5:17) The case for using the profit motive to inspire better healthcare solutions (8:54) How telehealth will eliminate up to 40% of doctor visits in the post-pandemic world (10:19) The exact moment when you should leave the healthcare industry to help more people (20:03) Why this economy is nothing like the economies of 2008 or 1929 (27:30) The real (and slightly nefarious) reason doctors won’t refill prescriptions over the phone (32:59) I've spoken with dozens of health innovators, and nearly everyone is trying to figure out their best pivot strategy. But they don't know what to change, how to pivot, or if their new pivot strategy is the right move. So I went into overdrive putting together a clear, actionable 5-step worksheet that will help you quickly define your most viable and profitable pivot path through the COVID crisis. And I’m giving it to you for FREE — no strings attached at https://www.Legacy-DNA.com/Pivot Guest Bio: David Pearlston is a surgical oncologist and CEO of DICOM Director, offering advanced solutions in medical imaging using full-3D holographic CT scan imaging in augmented and virtual reality, secure cloud storage for imaging, and quick, simple image sharing. As a lifelong learner, David stepped outside of his comfort zone as a physician, earned his business degree, and entered the world entrepreneurial startup ecosystem and he has not looked back. His unique insights into the clinical and business sides of healthcare brought him to DICOM Director and fuels his charge toward the future of healthcare innovation. If you’d like to reach out to David to learn more about DICOM, you can contact him at David.pearlstone@dicomdirector.com, on LinkedIn at DICOM Director, Facebook at DICOM Director, or on their website at dicomdirector.com.
Mitchell Goldburgh and Dawn Cram join the team to discuss the details of the Data Standards Evaluation Workgroup that has been formed through the HIMSS-SIIM Enterprise Imaging Community. This initiative is working to develop a Standards Scoring Model and leverage the scoring model to evaluate existing standards related to Body Part and/or Anatomic Region nomenclature, disseminating such findings to the Community in a neutral and evidentiary-based method. HIMSS-SIIM Questionnaire on Terminology Your participation in this short survey will help shape recommendations to industry and clinical care bodies on how body part and anatomic region is encoded in imaging data and supported in the systems you use for clinical care. We are looking for feedback from: All clinicians who take an image, interpret images or review images Images include all clinical photos, clinical multimedia, scope video, waveforms, visible-light modalities, DICOM modalities, etc. Any clinical informatics professional Any imaging informatics professional To learn more, visit the HIMSS and SIIM website. Click Here to Share Your Input. Other related episodes of SIIMCast that you might be interested in: Episode 32 - RADLEX / SNOMED CT Ontologies: Episode 34: Terminology Management with a Machine Learning Model:
As healthcare moves into a new era of increasing information vulnerability, radiologists should understand that they may be using systems exposed to altered data or data that contains malicious elements. This podcast explains the vulnerabilities of DICOM images and discusses requirements to properly secure these images from cyberattacks. For more on this topic, read Benoit Desjardins' article from the January issue of AJR. https://www.ajronline.org/doi/abs/10.2214/AJR.19.21958
Você sabia que quando liga para um consultório e verifica o resultado de um exame, isso já é telemedicina? E que já existem vistorias na beira do leito em hospitais do nordeste, feitas à distância por médicos de São Paulo? Isso é só o começo do que a prática da telemedicina pode proporcionar para o sistema de saúde, criando uma verdadeira revolução que traz muito mais eficiência e agilidade. Esse é o tema do nosso Podcast de hoje. Para discutir o assunto, nosso Head de Inovação Ricardo Pereira bate um papo com Aldo von Wangenheim, Professor Titular da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina. Quem é Ricardo Pereira? Possui graduação em ENGENHARIA ELÉTRICA pelo Instituto Nacional de Telecomunicações (1993), mestrado em Engenharia Elétrica pela Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina (1998) e doutorado em Engenharia Elétrica e Informática Industrial pela Universidade Tecnológica Federal do Paraná (2010). Com mais de 25 anos de experiência em empresas de tecnologia como Bosch, TIM, Dimension Data. Atualmente Head de Inovação na Qualirede.Quem é Aldo von Wangenheim? É Professor Titular da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina e possui graduação em Ciências da Computação pela Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina (1989) e Doutorado Acadêmico (Dr. rer.nat.) em Ciências da Computação pela Universidade de Kaiserslautern (1996). Atua na Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, onde é professor do Programa de Pós-graduação em Ciência da Computação e dos cursos de graduação em Ciências da Computação e Sistemas de Informação. Tem experiência nas áreas de Produção de Conteúdo para TV Digital Interativa, Informática em Saúde, Processamento e Análise de Imagens e Engenharia Biomédica, com ênfase em Telemedicina, Telerradiologia, Sistemas de Auxílio ao Diagnóstico por Imagem e Processamento de Imagens Médicas, com ênfase nos temas: analise inteligente de imagens e deep learning, DICOM, CBIR, informática médica, visão computacional e PACS. Coordena o Instituto Nacional de Ciência e Tecnologia para Convergência Digital - INCoD. É também Coordenador Técnico da Rede Catarinense de Telemedicina (RCTM) e membro fundador e ex-coordenador da Comissão Informática em Saúde da ABNT - ABNT/CEET 00:001.78. Atualmente também é membro da comissão ISO/TC 215 - Health Informatics. Foi coordenador da RFP6 - Conteúdo - do SBTVD - Sistema Brasileiro de TV Digital/Ministério das Comunicações. Foi Coordenador do Núcleo de Telessaúde de Santa Catarina no âmbito do Programa Telessaúde Brasil do Ministério da Saúde e da OPAS - Organização Pan-Americana de Saúde e Coordenador do Núcleo Santa Catarina da RUTE - Rede Universitária de Telemedicina. Em 2018 recebeu a Medalha Exército Brasileiro por suas contribuições à Telemedicina do Exército. A Medalha foi instituída pela Portaria nº 219 de 14 de Março de 2016 e destina-se a distinguir cidadãos e instituições civis que tenham praticado ação destacada ou serviço relevante em prol do interesse e do bom nome do Exército Brasileiro.
Continuing our series on standards, guests Chris Hafey (@chafey), Jim Philbin and Elliot Silver (@elliot_silver https://www.argentixinfo.com) cover the topic of DICOMWeb. In this episode, we look at how does DICOMWeb differs from traditional DICOM, we examine the differences between WADO-URI, WADO-WS, and WADO-RS, among many other areas discussed. You can find our podcast on Apple Podcast, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, or anywhere else you subscribe to podcasts. Please help us out by leaving a review on Apple Podcasts. You can find us on Twitter: @SIIM_Tweets, and individually at @arjunsharmarad, @jaynagels, @AAnandMD Visit us at https://siim.org/page/siimcast JDI Article referenced in the discussion: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10278-018-0073-z
En el ARDD 531, repasamos suspensión de SagoFisur, el Dicom para políticos, vulneración a menores, modernización tributaria, y cambios a la seguridad interna del país
Katja Beitat is the Founder of CliniVid, a mobile-first digital healthcare information sharing app. The app was established when Katja discovered communication gaps during care coordination that led to client dissatisfaction. CliniVid’s goal is to provide safe sharing of information across the healthcare sector. By pulling together patients records from different sources, CliniVid is able to create a complete picture for clinicians to work with. On this episode, Katja highlights CliniVid’s patient focus and the collaboration required by both patients and providers. Non-secure methods of exchanging info such as email, pagers, WhatsApp, etc. have resulted in vital patient information not being recorded and accessible. With CliniVid, Clinicians have one access point that they can contribute to and use to make crucial medical diagnoses and conclusions. In the case of oncology practitioners, CiniVid has made a huge impact by reducing tedious collaboration periods and bringing instant treatment advice to patients. CliniVid is designed to connect to existing systems, such as coreplus practice management which make it easier to integrate with. Katja foresees interoperability becoming stronger and services becoming more patient-centric. Her forecast includes various sectors on the tertiary care level becoming more connected as AI becomes safer to use. Key takeaways: CliniVid grew from bridging gaps in healthcare communication to a mobile-first digital communication tool for clinicians and patients The app allows providers from different health sectors and data sources to contribute to patients records, thus creating a comprehensive history for future treatments. The ClinVid library of info contains automated records, images, reports, videos and DICOM. CliniVid is able to connect to existing systems by using HL7, API and FHIR. The app not only connects healthcare providers, but speeds up decision making and treatment delivery essential to patients. CliniVid provides a complete health picture instantly! Resources and links: https://clinivid.com.au/ https://coreplus.com.au/add-ons/clinivid/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/katja-beitat/ HL7 Australia FHiR Standards for Digital Health Connect: https://www.linkedin.com/in/yianni-serpanos/ https://www.instagram.com/my_healthtechx/ https://www.meetup.com/HealthTechX/
En este episodio te actualizamos con la tasa de política monetaria del Banco Central, el mercado cambiario; el proyecto de presupuesto 2020 y finalmente conversamos con Claudia Álvarez sobre cómo hacer una debida diligencia para escoger una entidad financiera.
En este episodio te actualizamos con la tasa de política monetaria del Banco Central, el mercado cambiario; el proyecto de presupuesto 2020 y finalmente conversamos con Claudia Álvarez sobre cómo hacer una debida diligencia para escoger una entidad financiera.
En este episodio te actualizamos con la tasa de política monetaria del Banco Central, el mercado cambiario; el proyecto de presupuesto 2020 y finalmente conversamos con Claudia Álvarez sobre cómo hacer una debida diligencia para escoger una entidad financiera.
En este episodio te actualizamos con la tasa de política monetaria del Banco Central, el mercado cambiario; el proyecto de presupuesto 2020 y finalmente conversamos con Claudia Álvarez sobre cómo hacer una debida diligencia para escoger una entidad financiera.
This week on SIIMCast, join Arjun and Jason, as they interview Norman Young and Chris Hafey ( @CHafey ) about open source software in imaging informatics and medicine. Norman Young has been involved with medical imaging product development for the past 20 years. He began his career as a medical imaging software developer at an major academic hospital in Toronto, Canada. That was followed by stints at two RIS/PACS companies. In 2005, he founded ClearCanvas, an open source medical imaging software company, which went on to be acquired by Synaptive Medical in 2014. Today, Norman manages a team of physicists and software developers at Synaptive, building applications in MRI and imaging informatics. Chris Hafey serves as Chief Technology at Nucleus Health. Prior to NucleusHealth, Chris served as CTO for OnPoint Medical Diagnostics, Chief Architect at Vital Images, Director of Engineering at Stentor and other leadership roles for many technology firms. Chris is the creater of the Cornerstone Open source SDK for interacting with DICOM images on the web. You can find our podcast on Apple Podcast, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, or anywhere else you subscribe to podcasts. Please help us out by leaving a review on Apple Podcasts. You can find us on Twitter: @SIIM_Tweets, and individually at @arjunsharmarad, @jaynagels, @AAnandMD Visit us at https://siim.org/page/siimcast Medical Imaging-related Projects referenced in the discussion: CornerstoneJS Web-based medical imaging library: http://bit.ly/2yOUKYM Clear Canvas - https://www.clearcanvas.ca/ ClearCanvas Open Source Project - https://clearcanvas.github.io/ Horos Free Medical DICOM Viewer for OSX - https://horosproject.org/ OsiriX DICOM Viewer - https://www.osirix-viewer.com/ DVTk, a must have for anybody working with DICOM! - https://www.dvtk.org/ NextGen Connect (formerly Mirth Connect) - https://www.nextgen.com/products-and-services/integration-engine dwv, DICOM Web Viewer - https://ivmartel.github.io/dwv/ Oviyam - http://oviyam.raster.in/ And others: The Linux Operating System: What is Linux? at Opensource.com - https://opensource.com/resources/linux 3D Slicer - https://www.slicer.org/ Docker Enterprise Container Platform: https://www.docker.com/ MySQL Database - https://www.mysql.com/ PostgreSQL - https://www.postgresql.org/ MongoDB - https://www.mongodb.com/ Git - https://git-scm.com/ Visual Studio Code - https://code.visualstudio.com/ Node.js - https://nodejs.org/ React - https://reactjs.org/ React Bootstrap - https://react-bootstrap.github.io/
Being proactive when communicating with your customers helps to build trust and credibility. What happens when your customers find out about bad news before you tell them? Join your hosts Shannon Jean and Dave Hamilton for this episode of the Small Business Show to hear a great example of what NOT to do when things go wrong. Dave shares his experience with poor communication that literally stopped a company from being able to do business in his local area. And of course, Shannon adds to the tale with his own experience with this business, but from an entirely different perspective. Oh, and it involves beer, which is always a good thing. We then jump into a discussion about the right and wrong way to try to promote tie-in sales of, let's just say, somewhat related businesses. You'll hear why considering your demographic for one service before you try to promote a different product to that audience is critical to success, along with some other tips about growing your customer base. There's a lot more to learn and we couldn't think of a better way to allocate 32-minutes of time for your ears. We also want to hear from YOU! Contact us and comment at the Small Business Support Group. Thanks for listening! Chapters/Timestamps: 00:00:00 Small Business Show #224 for Wednesday, May 22, 2019 00:01:05 Learning Languages and Instruments 00:03:00 CAPTCHA and RE-CAPTCHA 00:04:41 Hopsy's Reaction to DICOM's Shutdown 00:11:00 Beware your own optimism! 00:11:51 Contact Your Customers Order Beer from The-Sub 00:17:09 Desperation or Disconnect? 00:19:12 SPONSOR: TextExpander.com/podcast gets you 20% off your first year 00:21:54 SPONSOR: The Alternative Board. TAB is a group of business owners & experts in your area that you can turn to for advice. Visit TheAlternativeBoard.com/SBS to apply for free today and find out if if there's a board seat available in your area! 00:23:57 The New York Times vs. The Daily Podcast and Subscriptions feedback@businessshow.co 00:29:45 Creative Engagement Solutions How I Built This 00:31:44 You Can Learn from Everything and Everyone 00:32:26 SBS 224 Outtro
In this AHEC original webinar you will gain an overall understanding of how your Radiology Information System and your Hospital Information System are able to communicate with your Digital Imaging Systems to obtain and store information. You’ll also gain a better understand on DICOM, PACS and the work flow of a typical system.
Steve and Gerry discuss recent research around embedding malware in DICOM image files, and they interview Dr. Charlie Frank, Mirai Botnet expert. As always they end with One Cool Thing. Show Notes Resources: Malware Embedded DICOM Files https://threatpost.com/hipaa-protected-malware-medical-images/143890/ One Cool Thing The Internet Arcade https://archive.org/details/internetarcade Louie, Louie – whoa, whoa https://www.digitaltrends.com/cool-tech/nasa-robot-king-louie Contact Email infosecicu@musc.edu Twitter: […] The post Weaponizing DICOM and Dr. Charlie Frank, Mirai Botnet Expert, Interview appeared first on MUSC Podcasts.
Health Information Exchanges (HIEs) play a critical role in improving the continuity of patient care across healthcare entities and geographies. HIEs often operate behind the scenes to coordinate the secure sharing of information across healthcare entities. Organizations considering using or interfacing with a Health Information Exchange (HIE) will benefit by listening to this Podcast discussion about security and privacy trends with Nick VanDuyne, Executive Director at NY Care Information Gateway and Meditology's Brian Selfridge. As the manager of a regional health information gateway partnered with the state of New York, Nick gives us an insider view of risk management security issues and approaches including: Key questions to ask in evaluating HIE or Regional Health Information Organizations (RHIOs). Specifically, how to evaluate the security and privacy controls of the entity. Challenges faced by the “big data” aspect of an HIE or RHIO and security approaches to address them. As well as methods for reconciling the security and privacy expectations of a wide range of disparate stakeholders that share and use health data (hospitals, state agencies, and others). The use of security certifications in providing demonstrable assurance of security controls to your members and business partners. An insider view of the inherent security strengths or vulnerabilities of healthcare data communication protocols like HL7, DICOM and newer HIE-specific protocols such as DIRECT. Opinions about emerging technologies and security considerations for the next wave of innovations poised to hit the healthcare market.
¿Cómo alguien se atreve en pleno siglo XXI a mandar a apagar una cámara, o a esconder un micrófono en una actividad pública del presidente @danilomedina ?Miren a Jesús Sosa Ruiz como gesticula con autoridad para que el corresponsal de @telenoticiasrd en Dajabón @goidy_reyes baje su cámara. Y después en la segunda parte del video un miembro de la seguridad del presidente con cachucha del IAD saca al periodista de la actividad. Un visita sorpresa que el presidente Medina concibió hace 6 años sin prensa. Y sorpresa al fin siempre ha sido difícil “empatarse” con este encuentro provechoso, humano, interesante, inspirador de un presidente con la comunidad. Nadie le quita su mérito. El futuro dirá si funcionaron o no. Pero si un reportero se entera y entra a la actividad perfectamente identificado pues se arma la crisis. O es que acaso se hablan cosas a escondidas que un periodista no puede estar presente para reportar. No es una boda. No es un cumpleaños. No son las vacaciones del presidente con su esposa, hijas y sus respectivos maridos. Es una acción de gobierno que financia proyectos y se hace con mi dinero. Con los impuestos del pueblo. ¿Cuál es el pecado capital de esconderlas? No puede seguir siendo un argumento que los comunitarios se cohíben de decirle al mandatario lo que piensan cuando ven un periodista. No y mil veces no. Un irrespeto brutal. Falta de decencia y educación. Falta de respeto e intransigencia hacia un medio y un periodista. Es bochornoso. Y me da pena porque hoy se generó allí una muy buena noticia y se empaña y no trasciende por la terquedad y la miopía hasta política de algunos. Todo lo que ocurrió allí se supo primero que DICOM y los sistemas gubernamentales de información. Y se supo porque todos los presentes campesinos, agricultores todos tienen un celular y se convirtieron en reporteros. Acciones amenazantes, trogloditas y tercas vividas hoy contra un reportero al final a quien más daño le hacen es la propia obra de gobierno, a sus visitas sorpresas y a Danilo. Coño, ¿y no se dan cuenta? #rcnoticias
The team sits down with long-time DICOM experts Charles Parisot and Don Van Syckle to discuss the standard's origins, development, ethos, and present standing.
Why Dave Decided to talk about the Laws Irrevocably in Heaven: In life there are laws we all must obey by. While the laws of gravity and federal laws are highly recommended to always keep in mind, take a minute to think about the laws that pertain to you specifically. What specific laws pertain to your business or your health? Take some time to contemplate these questions as Dave shares with you his own and stories of both obeying and forgetting such laws. Tips and Tricks for You and Your Business: (0:54) The Laws of the World We Live In (2:54) The Consequences of Disobeying the “Law of Self-Care” (6:48) You Need to Play by the “Laws of Business” and the “Laws of Life” (8:07) Get Your Seat at the Table Quotable Moments: (1:48) “Now, understand, just by obeying the “law” doesn’t mean you are guaranteed a seat at the table. It does not guarantee you an immediate blessing, or gratification or anything else” (6:26) “It’s now gotten to the point where I am so appreciative, so grateful, for my physical body…” (7:05) “I would just encourage you at this time to kind of find out: What are those Laws? What are the things you have to do? Then, start doing them. Don’t become frustrated when it’s not coming right away.” Other Tidbits: Dave learned the hard way about the importance of health after the spinal surgery he needed to get Spending time to reflect on the rules you have to abide by. How much exercise does YOUR body need? Important Links: FunnelHackingLive.comFunnelHackerRadio.com FunnelHackerRadio.com/freetrial FunnelHackerRadio.com/dreamcar ---Transcript--- Speaker 1: 00:00 Welcome to funnel hacker radio podcast, where we go behind the scenes and uncover the tactics and strategies top entrepreneurs are using to make more sales, dominate their markets, and how you can get those same results. Here is your host, Dave Woodward. Speaker 2: 00:17 All right, everybody. Welcome back. This is a fun day of recording. A couple of podcasts at back to back. I don't know exactly when he's going to become published or anything else, but I want to talk to you about what are the things I was studying just recently and I see so many. There's so many parallels and connections between things that are spiritual things that are Fizzer, physical and temporal, and so I was reading my scripture the other day and I came across one of my favorite scriptures. It says there is a lot. You're a vocable. He decreed in heaven before the foundations of this world upon which all blessings are predicated and when we obtain any blessing from God, it's by obedience to the laws upon which is predicated, or in other words, understand that there are laws in your life that you literally have to obey the laws to be able to get the blessings associated with that. Speaker 2: 01:02 Uh, and this applies not spirits thing that applies to physical things. Same. I see the same thing happen in my own life as far as physical. Uh, I would love to be a very, very fast runner, but the reality is, unless I'm willing to go pay the price to train, that is just not going to happen. I see. The same thing happened with, with people as far as their physical bodies. If you're, if you're dealing with a whole bunch of physical maladies and things, many of them can be cured just by physical activity, by water, by. I mean, there's, there are laws, nutrition laws, a lifting laws, cardio laws, all those types of laws that basically once you start obeying those laws, you start getting the benefits or the blessings of those. Now understand that just by obeying the law, it only qualifies you for a seat at the table. Speaker 2: 01:51 It does not guarantee immediate blessing or Grad gratification or anything else, and I think that's the thing I've always gotten so frustrated with is like, well, I'm. I'm doing what's right in my business here, but I'm not seeing it. I'm not reaping any rewards. I'm not getting the benefit that I thought would happen instantly. I built a phone, I built an optin page. I drove traffic to it, and yet I haven't made a million dollars in my funnel. Understand that is not how this works. The way it works is by starting to do those types of laws and finding out what those laws are and being obedient to him, it qualifies you for a seat at the table. It doesn't mean that it instantly happens. If it instantly happened, everybody would do it. So what happens for us, for me at least I've seen in my own life is I've seen this a lot. Speaker 2: 02:32 I'm really been focusing on trying to get more involved as far as lifting and starting to build more muscle mass. Uh, and a lot of this really stemmed from a surgery I had at the beginning of this year with my back. I'd never, I'd really focused the last few years on just diving in and doing everything I could to build, build our company, everything else. And I kind of let a lot of my physical body and energy and things kind of fall to the wayside. And I was only working out on occasionally that it wasn't anything consistent. Well, what happened was I ended up creating, or my body somehow started developing calcium deposits inside of my spine that was creating a bone spur that literally was growing into my nervous court, my nerve cord, my spinal cord that literally was preventing me. I was getting dropped, put where my, I couldn't pull my toes up and it got so bad at this time. Speaker 2: 03:28 It was literally this time last year where I finally went to the doctor said, listen, I got to figure this thing out, and he said, well, you literally. It got so bad that the day I went and saw the surgeon, he said, have you already eaten anything today? And I said, no, I haven't. He goes, if you alright. I said, I had. I'd already had breakfast and stuff. He goes, well man, I wish you hadn't because I literally take you into surgery right now. Says this isn't something that can wait anymore. You have. You literally have postpone and push this off to the point where he was concerned. I had done permanent damage to my spinal cord that I was going to be irreparable and I was not gonna be able to get any of the balance, the coordination back in my foot and I'm like, oh my gosh, is there, how late can this wait and push this off? Speaker 2: 04:15 I say, God, you know, holidays and Christmas. He goes, you don't understand how serious this is. I'm like, listen, I've gotten a family come in and he goes, Dave, listen to me. What is the first day you can get in here? Well, this was literally the two days before Christmas last year. I said, I've got my family coming in. I literally, the soon as I can get in will be the first. And so January the second of January it goes, all right, January second, you're coming in for surgery. So we went in for surgery and I remember during that holiday period of time, we were with some my family and I was sitting there and uh, we're supposed to go walk through this. The, these beautiful Christmas lights was this garden of Christmas lights and things down at Thanksgiving point in Utah. And I got to the point where I literally couldn't walk and they had to push me in a wheelchair. Speaker 2: 05:05 And I'm like, oh my gosh, I can't believe I've let myself get to this point. And I remember the emotional pain as well as the physical pain. I was having a thinking, why did I, why didn't I fix this? Why did I push this off so far? And, uh, we ended up right after we had Christmas. We went to a cabin and I literally laid in bed almost the entire time sitting there thinking, why would I? I know better. I know better than this. Why? Because I was so fresh with myself. So we went through the surgery on the second of January and I was amazed that you know how much I was at. The pain was gone, but the nerve did not come back and I remember literally my frustration. Even at funnel hacking live last year and thinking I still don't have control and the balance in my feet and it is. Speaker 2: 06:01 It's literally taken almost almost a year to where I can balance on one foot and my only reason saying that is I do. Whether it's in your own personal life or in your business to understand that just because I've done all the rehab and everything else, but it's taken over almost a year to get to that point. To where I can now run and it's now at that point to where I am so appreciative. So grateful for just my physical body and being able to get the nerve sensations back in my feet and to be able to run and to exercise and to do these types of things that I. my only reason I mentioned this is understand there are laws in business, there are laws in your life that you have to obey those laws to just qualify for yourself for a seat at the table and again, whether you look at it from a spiritual standpoint, whether you look at it, a physical standpoint, your business, your relationships, there are certain things you just have to do to qualify and I would just encourage you this time to kind of find out what are those laws, what are the things you have to do, and then start doing them. Speaker 2: 07:10 Don't get frustrated. It's not coming right away. I would have been really easy for me to get super frustrated and there was times over this course this last year where I was, where I'm like, listen, I'm doing everything I can and I still can't move my feet the way I want to move. I still can't feel the sensation at the bottom of my feet. I had this whole neuropathy thing where I wasn't able to feel sensation on my heel or my toes, but as I continued day after day, getting up at 4:30 in the morning, Mondays and Tuesdays and sometimes even on Thursdays to go and work out. I'm starting to get these things back and it's taken on again almost a year. A equality again, the surgery. That was the first thing I had to do to basically qualify myself to get a seat at the table and then it's literally been working out on a regular basis throughout this year that has now started to generate the sensations that I want back in my feet and my legs into being able to run and to enjoy the things which I used to enjoy without even thinking about it. Speaker 2: 08:05 So get my only reason to say saying this is whether it's in your own personal life, whether it's in your business, understand there are laws that are irrevocably decreed. Meaning it's just there's no other way around it. You have to do those things to just get a seat at the table. It doesn't mean you're guaranteed instant success, but it qualifies you for a seat at the table and as you continue to do time and time and time again, over time it builds up that muscle, the spiritual muscle, the temporal muscle, the physical muscle, the nerve sensation. For me, it's taken that much time and I'm grateful for it and so I just encourage you guys as I'm reflecting over the course of this year, all the things that I've done to get back to where it's almost a starting point. It's not even. It's not like I'm super fast. Speaker 2: 08:44 It's just I'm back to ground zero where I was about a year ago, and yet I would just encourage you just to understand that there are laws. Find out what the laws are in your business and your relationships spiritually. It might be start doing the things that you know you need to do and stick to it and I promise you over time it always works. So everyone please. Again, I this. I'm trying to learn to become much more vulnerable and sharing these things, and this podcast is a little more difficult than I normally share a. it'd be involved a lot of spiritual things for me. It involved a lot of physical things as well. Let me know if this is resonating, if this connects with you, if there's. If this is making sense and if it's appreciated, if it's. If I'm wasting your time, I want to know that I really, really do so please let me know if this type of a podcast is a value to you and if for some reason it's not letting me know that too. Speaker 2: 09:34 I really do. I appreciate the time and the energy that you put forth and listening to this and I want to make sure that I'm doing everything I possibly can to provide you the very greatest content of value to you. So again, if you don't mind, send me a personal message on facebook or instagram or send me an email a day to click puddles. Let me know if this is a value to you. Again, I look forward to seeing you guys at funnel hacking live. I really hope that everybody who's listening to this podcast comes up and says hi, and that, uh, you know what? I listened to your podcast and I appreciated. Or you know what, Dave, you really suck. These are terrible podcasts. I actually deleted all the podcasts I didn't want to hear from you again. Whatever it might be, I want to know. Speaker 2: 10:11 So again, hopefully if you haven't got your ticket to funnel hacking live, by all means go get your tickets at funnel hacking, live Dicom and give me the feedback. I really honestly, genuinely want to know if this is a value to you guys. If it's not, I, I, I need to know that I am going to continue to do interviews of other people who are successful and I'm trying to find out if my learning to share stories better and my, my finding my own voice if it's resonating, if it's helpful for you and if it's connecting. If it's not, I have no problem going back to just doing only a interviews because I enjoy those as well. But again, just let me know if it's a value to you, if it connects, it resonates. Most importantly, I really hope to see you guys to meet you. I love connecting faces to names and I hope to see as many of you as possible at funnel hacking live. So go get your tickets, funnel hacking live.com and have an amazing day. Speaker 3: 11:03 Hey everybody, thank you so much for taking the time to listen to the podcast. If you don't mind, could you please share this with others, rate and review this podcast on itunes. It means the world to me where I'm trying to get to as a million downloads here in the next few months and just crush through over 650,000 and I just want to get the next few 100,000 so we can get to a million downloads and see really what I can do to help improve and and get this out to more people. At the same time. If there's a topic, there's something you'd like me to share or someone you'd like me to interview, by all means, just reach out to me on facebook. You can pm me and I'm more than happy to take any of your feedback as well as if people would like me to interview more than happy to reach out and have that conversation with you. So again, go to Itunes, rate and review this, share this podcast with others and let me know how else I can improve this or what I can do to make this better for you guys. Thanks.
DICOM (Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine) ist DER Standard, wenn es um medizinische Bilder geht. Vermutlich hat jeder von Euch schon eine selbstgebrannte CD vom Radiologen bekommen. Diese ist mit hoher Wahrscheinlichkeit nach DICOM-Spezifikationen gebrannt. Was sonst noch alles mit diesem Standard gemacht werden kann, erklären Renato und Christian in Folge 52 des eHealth-Podcasts. In den News am Anfang geht es unter anderem um eine conhIT-Nachlese mit Shehealth und der IT-Werkstatt, sowie geleakten §21-Daten und eine App, die gute Ergebnisse bei der Messung der Durchblutung der Hand erziehlt. Links: Podcast-Empfehlungen Gesundheit.Macht.Politik - https://gesundheitmachtpolitik.de/ PassioMed Radio - https://www.passiomed.de/podcasts/ Evidenzgeschichten - https://evidenzgeschichten.podigee.io/ News MediLeaks - http://medileaks.cc/ Durchblutung Hand - https://www.aerzteblatt.de/nachrichten/92236/App-misst-Durchblutung-der-Hand-besser-als-Arzt-mit-Allen-Test Shehealth auf Twitter - https://twitter.com/search?q=shehealth&src=typd
Introducing GuidedSMILE CHROME - DIGITAL, FULL-ARCH GUIDED RECONSTRUCTION GuidedSMILE was developed for dentists who desire a preplanned, predictable guided All-On-X style surgery. This amazing service delivers anchored bite verification, anchored bone reduction, anchored site drilling, accurate anchored provisionalization, and a method of transferring all surgical and restorative information for the final restorative conversion phase. Most cases simply require a CT scan and traditional records. Call to discuss your case. The process, the product, the surgery is straightforward! GuidedSMILE CHROME is a 4-Guide System 1 Pin guide - Utilizes teeth or tissue to deliver the Fixation Base (CR/CO SLM) Dentate Pin Guide is fully seated on the patient's existing dentition. Once verified via the two occlusal windows, the horizontal sites are drilled and anchored. Anchor pins are fully seated, verified and the guide is removed. Edentulous Pin Guide is a digital duplicate of the patient's existing denture. This tissue-supported guide is inserted, patient closes, and the anchor sites are drilled, anchored, verified, and the guide is removed. 2 Fixation Base - Use for bone reduction, anchoring the osteotomy guide and prosthetic Once teeth are removed and tissue is flapped, the Bone Reduction Guide is inserted, anchored, and bone is levelled to the meet the labial and lingual frame of the guide. This guide floats above the bone, and therefore should not be impinged by undercut. 3 Osteotomy Guide This guide is rigidly fixed with the pins, yet floats around the bone. Standard protocols are followed to drill sites and place implants. 4 PMMA Superior to conventional denture pick-up systems, this anchored GuidedSMILE nano-ceramic provisional transfers the CO/CR as determined by pre-surgical records. Implant abutment positions, anchor sites, tooth position, smile, and tissue space are all pre-set. 5 RAPID Appliance - The method of communicating GuidedSMILE to the articulator for the Final RAPID Appliance is ROE's special pick-up device, a clear duplicate of the PMMA. This allows the doctor to capture a second record to hold until final conversion. Once the patient is ready for the final, perform a pick-up impression, with tray adhesive on the tissue side, using medium PVS. Send this pick-up to ROE and we will GuidedSMILE Osteotomy Preparation Options Option 1 - GuidedSMILE-FG - All GuidedSMILE cases are utilize a Fully Guided Kit (as seen above) - ROE works with nearly all systems available today. Option 2 - GuidedSMILE-FH - Free-Hand - includes a location reference on the bone reduction frame to optimize implant location for PMMA pick-up, and a removeable reference inset to provide a maximum range for site preparation. Left image: notice the round divot references indicating implant general location. Right image: boundary insert used to ensure location of implants is within PMMA parameters. GuidedSMILE Work-Up Protocol Step 1: Complete our on-line Rx to provide ROE with complete case information: upload DICOM / Photograph (full face, full natural smile) as 'Documents' through this Rx web page: LINK web site portal Send master casts, bite registration (CO and/or CR), and/or digital impressions, study casts – print UPS label here. Send MSGA - Master Surgical Guide Agreement with first case (required to begin) - Required - GuidedSMILE Work Authorization required for all cases (on line or White Paper) - Optional - Esthetic & Funct'l Checklist include please if ROE is significantly changing tooth arrangement, or a new denture set-up is needed. Step 2: Meet ROE on line for implant and guide planning (allow 5 days after receiving all materials) Link Step 3: Sign and return the TPA Treatment Plan Report – via fax or scan and email Step 4: Receive the GSI Surgical Information Form to order parts and review surgery – via email Step 5: Receive guide (ROE will ship within 10 days of the signed TPA Treatment Plan Report) Notes on preparring for and capturing the CT Scan If your patient is dentate, follow the above steps, and capture a CT scan with the patient opened biting on cotton rolls. If patient is edentulous, and the existing denture fits well and the tooth arrangement is accepted, convert into a scan appliance (instructions page 6). Perform a dual scan using the protocol in our manual. If edentulous patients needs to establish tooth position and vertical, begin conventional denture steps to create a scan appliance. We are always available to discuss your case. Call 800 228 6663 and ask for the CT Department and reference GuidedSMILE. Digital Impression: ROE accepts all digital impressions. Here are your options: 3Shape - must use 3Shape Communicate - ROE's email is trios@roedentallab.com to open a connection Cadent iTero - must use Cadent's portal, just search for ROE to add connection E4D - either use the Model Export function in Romexis to export files to the desktop and upload through our portal along with your DICOM, or use DDX (not dependable) Sirona - either export a DXD file to your desktop and upload through our portal for ROE to convert, or us Cerec Connect to upload to ROE 3M TDS - must us 3M's portal Carestream 3500, 3600 - export .stl to desktop and upload to our portal, or use DDX (not dependable)
Two months ago, I laid in a long, metal tube in a London hospital, staring at the blank white walls around me as the entire room buzzed and hummed with the sounds of high-tech analysis. I was getting a "Magnetic Resonance Imaging" procedure done - also known as an "MRI". But this was no typical MRI. I wasn’t injured and I wasn’t sick: I was simply immersed in a brand new form of cutting-edge image analysis - an ultra-fast MRI scan to deliver precise quantification of fat and muscle tissue within hours - designed to give me a complete analysis of the entire structure of my body and brain - from extremely accurate body fat percentage and body fat distribution of visceral and subcutaneous fat, to the nitty-gritty details of everything from lean muscle and the brain, and beyond. In today’s podcast, I'm going to take a deep dive into how you can do this type of advanced analysis of your body’s structure, the future of MRI testing for performance, longevity and aesthetics, and much more - including a very special appearance by Dr. Jack Kruse on how MRI's can be used to analyze something called the "redox potential" of the human body. My first guest in this episode is Marcus Foster. Marcus spent most of his career as a Product Manager for technology companies, including 8 years at Google. In November 2011, he was involved in a serious cycling accident, breaking four ribs and his collarbone. He started playing around with 3D volume renderings of the CT scan that was done of his thorax as a result of the accident. He was blown away by how beautiful the human body looks on the inside. A year later he got knocked off his bike again, this time breaking his wrist, leading to another CT scan. The next year he was diagnosed with a tumor in his head and had to have a series of MRI scans. While he was gradually collecting imagery of different parts of his body, it seemed difficult to scale this model. In 2014, Marcus left Google and started Klarismo with the goal of making medical imaging more accessible to consumers as a means to explore and understand their own bodies. My second guest in this episode, Dr. Jack Kruse, is a respected neurosurgeon and CEO of Optimized Life, a health and wellness company dedicated to helping patients avoid the healthcare burdens we typically encounter as we age. He is currently in private practice in the Gulf South. As a neurosurgeon, Dr. Kruse’s research has been published in respected dental and medical journals. His popular blog, , gets over 250,000 unique worldwide visitors per month from countries like Australia, Germany, Russia, and Zambia (Africa). During our discussion, you’ll discover: -The series of horrific cycling accidents and eventually a tumor that led Marcus to delve into the fascinating world of CT scanning and MRI scanning...[10:45] -The little-known medical condition that can lead to low testosterone in men, and how you can find out if you have it...[18:20] -How something called a "Klarismo" scan is different than any other form of MRI...[24:12] -Whether MRI's are dangerous at all, especially in terms of radiation or exposure to "dirty electricity"...[25:30] -How you can find out the size of your brain, and the link between that and intelligence...[35:00] -What you can actually do with data that shows your precise fat and muscle distribution...[38:07] -The future of MRI testing, and how you can actually determine the positive and negative charges within tissue...[45:00] -What exactly "redox potential" is and what an MRI can tell you about your body's redox potential...[58:10] -Why Jack Kruse thinks Ben's tattoos have deleteriously affected his redox potential...[71:40] -And much more! Resources from this episode: - - - - and "" - - - There are several free tools you can use to view this raw data (DICOM files): -For Mac users: -For Windows users: -For Linux users: , also check out . Do you have questions, comments or feedback for Marcus or me? Leave your thoughts at and one of us will reply!
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.04.16.044453v1?rss=1 Authors: Huang, W., Shu, N. Abstract: The brain structure network constructed by diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) reflects the anatomical connections between brain regions, so the brain structure network can quantitatively describes the anatomical connectivity pattern of the entire brain. The structure network based diffusion tensor imaging is widely used in scientific research. While a number of post processing packages have been developed, fully automated processing of DTI datasets on Windows Operating System remains challenging. Here, we developed a MATLAB toolbox named "Diffusion Connectome Pipeline" (DCP) for fully automated constructing brain structure network. The processing modules of a few developed packages, including Diffusion Toolkit, DiffusionKit, SPM and MRIcron, were employed in DCP. Using any number of raw DTI datasets from different subjects, in either DICOM or NIfTI format, DCP can automatically perform a series of steps to construct network. In addition, DCP has a friendly graphical user interface (GUI) running on the Windows Operating System, allowing the user to be interactive and to adjust the input/output settings, as well as the processing parameters. As an open-source package, DCP is freely available at https://www.nitrc.org/projects/dcp. This novel toolbox is expected to substantially simplify the image processing of DTI datasets and facilitate human brain structural connectome studies. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info