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Blackberry Aurora Unveiled; Runs on Android 7.0 Nougat OS

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Blackberry Aurora: A number of smartphones and electronic gadgets are getting launched every now and then. And the latest one which has come out of late is the one from the house of Blackberry. The smartphone has been given the name of Aurora. And it will be really a matter of interest to find out …

The post Blackberry Aurora Unveiled; Runs on Android 7.0 Nougat OS appeared first on Fab Newz:Latest News Headlines-India, World, Tech, Sports, Politics, Business, Auto and More. Reported by Fab Newz 16 hours ago.

There's a raging talent war for AI experts and its costing automakers millions

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There's a raging talent war for AI experts and its costing automakers millions The self-driving car space is getting increasingly more cutthroat.

The sheer number of lawsuits filed recently are a testament to that.

Tesla, for example, is suing its former Autopilot director Sterling Anderson. The lawsuit claims Anderson stole data for a competing venture, Aurora Innovations, that hasn’t even come out of stealth mode yet. Aurora denies the claims.

Buried in that lawsuit, though, was some interesting commentary on the competitive nature of the industry and the kind of culture it has bred:

"In their zeal to play catch-up, traditional automakers have created a get-rich-quick environment. Small teams of programmers with little more than demoware have been bought for as much as a billion dollars. Cruise Automation, a 40-person firm, was purchased by General Motors in July 2016 for nearly $1 billion. In August 2016, Uber acquired Otto, another self-driving startup that had been founded only seven months earlier, in a deal worth more than $680 million."

(Otto is currently at the heart of a lawsuit filed by Waymo, Alphabet’s self-driving-car company, alleging Uber stole intellectual property.)

So why is it that tiny startups with little to no brand recognition are getting acquired for millions? *AI specialists told Business Insider it has little to do with acquiring the startup’s tech and everything to do with nabbing talent.*

That’s because there’s a serious lack of experts in the field of deep learning, a branch of artificial intelligence where computers learn on their own. Deep learning is key to advancing self-driving tech as it allows cars to learn safe driving at a much faster rate than traditional programming.

"The growth of demand is much faster than the rate of which we can produce people with PhDs or even master’s in this area," Yoshua Bengio, head of the Montreal Institute for Learning Algorithms, told Business Insider. "There’s just an explosion of interest from the industry... and it’s like a fire growing on the prairie."

*Growth in demand*

Machine learning has advanced rapidly in the last five years.

In March of last year, a program developed by Google DeepMind, a London-based AI lab, beat a world champion at the highly complex game of Go — a game that has more moves than there are atoms in the universe.

That’s not even the latest feat in artificial intelligence. In January, a bot developed by Carnegie Mellon University beat four of the world’s best poker players at Texas Hold ‘Em, sweeping them of $1.8 million.

Companies are only expanding their AI teams as the field rapidly develops.

"Because machine learning and artificial intelligence is growing, companies are poaching professors all the time," Geoff Gordon, an associate research professor of machine learning at CMU, told Business Insider.

But automakers, in particular, are making massive investments in experts because they’ve begun their AI efforts late compared to traditional tech companies.

Because deep learning has applications far beyond just self-driving cars, manufacturers are having to compete with each other and traditional tech companies.

Only 28 companies have more than 10 deep learning specialists on staff, accounting firm KPMG wrote in a 2016 report. What's more, only six technology companies employ 54% of all deep learning specialists: Google, Microsoft, NVIDIA, IBM, Intel, and Samsung.

"The traditional power and talent of the auto industry was based in their product development group," Gary Silberg, the head of KPMG’s automotive unit, told Business Insider. "So they would hire these amazing mechanical and electrical engineers at the top schools of engineering and they would be part of product development."

"You can’t just turn on a dime and say, 'ok, now we are going to go recruit AI geniuses and computer scientists and expect them to come to work with us,'" Silberg continued.

*The bottleneck effect*

Companies pursuing self-driving cars have turned to the universities with the brightest minds in the space to acquire talent.

In March 2015, Uber gutted Carnegie Mellon University’s AI and robotics center. The ride-hailing service poached over 50 experts, including Anthony Stentz, who had served as the director for the last four-and-a-half years.

A few months later, Uber announced a strategic partnership with the university to create the Uber Advanced Technologies Center for self-driving cars.

Andrew Ng, a renowned deep learning expert, left Stanford to become Baidu’s chief scientist in 2014. Baidu has a permit to test its self-driving vehicles in California and has tested its cars in China.

Universities are struggling to fill the void left by these poachings.

Companies have created a bottleneck where they are looking for talent at a rate that’s impossible to produce, said Bengio, the University of Montreal professor who is considered a pioneer in deep learning. It takes about five years for the average doctoral candidate to get his or her PhD.

The problem is amplified by the fact that professors are leaving universities to work at tech and auto companies.

"The demand for people who want to work in this area is growing but the bottleneck is that there are not enough academic labs, not enough professors to supervise all these students who want to get into this field," Bengio said.

Gordon said CMU is definitely seeing an increase in the number of people who want to specialize in deep learning. For the upcoming academic year, CMU’s machine learning doctorate program received 800 applications. It had received 300 applications just two years prior.

Bengio said he gets 600 applications every year for students who want to study machine learning at the University of Montreal. He can only teach around 20 students.

That growing interest in machine learning is encouraging, but classroom sizes can only expand so much with a limited pool of professors.

"There are very few experts in this area until quite recently and many of them are being snapped up by industries because they are in so much of a need for that expertise," Bengio said. "So now you have even less professors than you did just a couple of years ago."

*A $1 billion going rate*

The shortage of AI talent means the going rate for specialists is high, especially for startups, which allow companies to acquire talent in bulk.

GM bought San Francisco-based startup Cruise Automation for $581 million in March 2016. Uber bought self-driving-truck startup Otto in a deal worth $680 million last August.

More recently, Ford invested $1 billion in Pittsburgh-based startup Argo AI. That investment will be spread out over 5 years.

Julie Lodge-Jarrett, Ford’s human resources director, said the Argo AI investment is indicative of how Ford has changed its strategy to recruit and retain talent as demand for artificial intelligence experts rises.

"As we’ve shifted from being an automotive company to being automotive and mobility we’ve seen an increase need for tech talent," Lodge-Jarrett told Business Insider. "So in places like machine learning or AI or robotics… we see a greater need for ourselves at Ford and also a more competitive market for that particular talent."

Lodge-Jarret said Ford is looking to buy more talent in bulk because it also helps them recruit in the future.

Argo AI is co-founded by Bryan Salesky, the former director of hardware for Google's self-driving-car efforts, and Peter Rander, Uber's engineering lead at its autonomous cars center.

Those kinds of connections make it easier for Ford to acquire the kind of talent that has traditionally worked for major tech companies.

Bengio said the Argo AI investment is indicative of how "the game has been in the last couple of years."

"The sad thing is most of these are just for recruiting," he said. "It’s kind of a loss for the economy because most often the projects these small companies had don’t continue once they’ve been integrated into the company…. It’s kind of a waste of resources and investment in some sense."

*SEE ALSO: An MIT professor explains why we are still a long ways off from solving one of the biggest problems with self-driving cars*

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Rolls-Royce made a stunning driverless concept car Reported by Business Insider 7 hours ago.

Basketball roundup: Eaglecrest, Grandview win Class 5A titles, plus more analysis

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The city of Aurora reigned supreme in big-school basketball on Saturday at the Denver Coliseum, as Eaglecrest emerged victorious with the Class 5A boys title and Grandview won the Class 5A girls championship. Reported by Denver Post 5 hours ago.

Alaskan Way Viaduct inspection over, but Aurora will close for event Sunday morning

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The Alaskan Way Viaduct has reopened after a brief closure for inspection, the Washington State Department of Transportation said Saturday. But Aurora Avenue North will close from 6 a.m. to noon on Sunday due to an event. Reported by Seattle Times 1 week ago.

2,900-acre development south of DIA announced at Aurora Chamber event

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A 2,900-acre development has been proposed for a portion of the 21,000-acre Aerotropolis area south of Denver International Airport, according to a release Monday sent by the development group, Aurora Highlands LLC. The Aurora Highlands is a mixed-use development that could eventually grow to 5,000 acres, according to the release, home to 23,000 families as well as office, retail and industrial space and parks and recreation. Homes are anticipated to range in price from $200,000 to $1 million. Aurora… Reported by bizjournals 12 hours ago.

New Research On Northern Lights To Improve Satellite Navigation Accuracy

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Researchers at the University of Bath have gained new insights into the mechanisms of the Northern Lights, providing an opportunity to develop better satellite technology that can negate outages caused by this natural phenomenon.

Previous research has shown that the natural lights of the Northern Lights — also known as or Aurora Borealis — interfere with Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) signals which are heavily relied upon in the transport and civil aviation industries.

The presence of plasma turbulence within the Northern Lights was traditionally deemed responsible for causing GNSS inaccuracies. However, this latest research found that turbulence does not exist, suggesting new, unknown mechanisms are actually responsible for outages on GNSS signals.

This is the first time it has been shown that turbulence does not take place within the Northern Lights and this new knowledge will enable new technological solutions to overcome these outages.

The research team from the University of Bath’s Department of Electronic & Electrical Engineering in collaboration with the European Incoherent Scatter Scientific Association (EISCAT) observed the Northern Lights in Tromsø, northern Norway, where they observed and analysed the Northern Lights simultaneously using radar and a co-located GNSS receiver.

GNSS signals were used to identify how the Northern Lights interfere with GPS signals. Radar analysis provided a visual snap shot of the make-up of this famous and spectacular phenomenon.

GNSS is used to pinpoint the geographic location of a user’s receiver anywhere in the world. Numerous systems are in use across the world including the widely known United States’ Global Positioning System (GPS), the Russian Federation’s Global Orbiting Navigation Satellite System (GLONASS) and Europe’s Galileo.

Each of the GNSS systems employs a constellation of satellites orbiting the Earth at an altitude of 20,000 km satellites, working in conjunction with a network of ground stations. Originally developed by the US government for military navigation, satellite navigation systems are now widely used by anyone with a GNSS device, such as an in-car SatNav, mobile phone or handheld navigation unit, which can receive the radio signals that the satellites broadcast.

The Northern Lights occur at North and South magnetic Poles, and are the result of collisions between gaseous particles in the Earth’s atmosphere with charged particles released from the sun’s atmosphere.

The researchers believe this heightened understanding of the Northern Lights will inform the creation of new types of GNSS technology which are robust against the disturbances of the Northern Lights, and help influence GNSS regulations used in industries such as civil aviation, land management, drone technology, mobile communications, transport and autonomous vehicles.

Lead researcher and Lecturer in the Department of Electronic & Electrical Engineering at the University of Bath, Dr Biagio Forte, said: “With increasing dependency upon GNSS with the planned introduction of 5G networks and autonomous vehicles which rely heavily on GNSS, the need for accurate and reliable satellite navigation systems everywhere in the world has never been more critical.

“The potential impact of inaccurate GNSS signals could be severe. Whilst outages in mobile phones may not be life threatening, unreliability in satellite navigations systems in autonomous vehicles or drones delivering payloads could result in serious harm to both humans and the environment.

“This new understanding of the mechanisms which affect GNSS outages will lead to new technology that will enable safe and reliable satellite navigation.” Reported by Eurasia Review 6 hours ago.

Algae turns Aussie beaches bright neon blue

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"It was very interesting watching this iridescent aquamarine colour light up the waves as they crashed. It was as good as shooting the Aurora Australis, but a bit easier." Reported by Brisbane Times 2 hours ago.

Somali Pirates Hijack First Commercial Ship Since 2012

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NAIROBI (Reuters) - Pirates have hijacked a Sri Lankan-flagged oil tanker, a Somali official said on Tuesday, the first time they have successfully taken a commercial ship since 2012.

The Aris 13 sent a distress call on Monday, turned off its tracking system and altered course for the Somali port town of Alula, said John Steed of the aid group Oceans Beyond Piracy.

“The pirates hijacked the oil tanker and they brought it near Alula,” Mohamud Ahmed Eynab, the district commissioner for Alula, told Reuters on Tuesday by phone. Pirates in the town confirmed they were expecting the ship.

The tanker was believed to have eight crew on board, said Steed, an expert on piracy who is in contact with naval forces tracking the ship.

“The ship reported it was being followed by two skiffs yesterday afternoon. Then it disappeared,” he told Reuters.

Aircraft from regional naval force EU Navfor were flying overhead to track the ship’s progress and to try to determine what was happening, he said.

Data from Reuters systems showed it made a sharp about turn just after it passed the Horn of Africa on its voyage from Djibouti to Mogadishu.


Somali pirates suspected of hijacking ship after long layoff, expert says https://t.co/MuVO15gR40 pic.twitter.com/KSG4tgUicD

— Reuters World (@ReutersWorld) March 14, 2017


The 1,800 deadweight ton Aris 13 is owned by Panama company Armi Shipping and managed by Aurora Ship Management in the United Arab Emirates, according to the Equasis shipping data website, managed by the French transport ministry.

The ship was being monitored by the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Organisation (UKMTO), which coordinates the management of all merchant ships and yachts in the Gulf of Aden area, the head of the International Maritime Bureau’s piracy reporting center in Kuala Lumpur, Noel Choong, said.

The UKMTO in Dubai said it had no further information.

In their heyday five years ago, Somali pirates launched 237 attacks off the coast of Somalia in 2011, the International Maritime Bureau says, and held hundreds of hostages.

That year, Ocean’s Beyond Piracy estimated the global cost of piracy was about $7 billion. The shipping industry bore roughly 80 percent of those costs, the group’s analysis showed.

But attacks fell sharply after ship owners tightened security and avoided the Somali coast.

Intervention by regional naval forces that flooded into the area helped disrupt several hijack bids and improved security for the strategic trade route that leads through the Suez Canal and links the oilfields of the Middle East with European ports.type=type=RelatedArticlesblockTitle=Related... + articlesList=580bb5a9e4b02444efa3cf5a

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 23 hours ago.

Accenture Becomes Newest Member of The StartUp Health Network

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The StartUp Health Network Provides Access to Global Army of Health Transformers, Health Moonshot Mindset Coaching & Powerful Digital Health Insights

New York, NY (PRWEB) March 14, 2017

StartUp Health, which is organizing and supporting a global army of Health TransformersTM, announced that Accenture, one of the world’s leading professional services companies, has joined its exclusive StartUp Health Network. This builds on momentum from the HealthTech Innovation Challenge that was hosted at the StartUp Health Festival in San Francisco in January 2017.

The StartUp Health Network connects Accenture leaders to StartUp Health’s rapidly growing global army of nearly 400 Health Transformers in more than 60 cities and spanning 18 countries on five continents. StartUp Health will work closely with Accenture to streamline the process of working with Health Transformers, digital health entrepreneurs, innovators and disruptors. Startup Health will also provide Accenture’s leaders its proprietary Transformer Mindset Coaching program and access to its StartUp Health Insights.

“We are proud to be a member of The StartUp Health Network and look forward to working together to support a new generation of Health Transformers,” said Brian Kalis, managing director of digital health at Accenture. As part of the Accenture Innovation Architecture, this new effort will provide an environment for our health clients to easily connect into a global ecosystem of digital health startups.”

Unity Stoakes, co-founder and president of StartUp Health, said, “By working with industry leaders like Accenture, and their world class clients, we are streamlining the process of connecting Health Transformers to those that can supercharge their progress. We only collaborate with partners who have a Health Moonshot Mindset - and we’re incredibly excited to have Accenture as a Member of The StartUp Health Network.”

StartUp Health and its global army of Health Transformers are on a 25 year mission to achieve 10 Health Moonshots essential to improving the health and wellbeing of everyone in the world. To date, twelve of StartUp Health’s companies have been acquired by companies including Intel, WebMD, Under Armour and Zimmer Biomet. StartUp Health’s portfolio— now 190 companies and growing— has raised more than $700M of funding since 2012. StartUp Health’s diverse portfolio currently comprises 40 percent “doctorpreneurs,” 30 percent female founders and 30 percent serial entrepreneurs.

To become a member of the growing network of partners at StartUp Health, please contact us http://www.startuphealth.com.

About StartUp Health

In 2011, StartUp Health introduced a revolutionary new model for transforming health by organizing and supporting a global army of entrepreneurs called Health TransformersTM. StartUp Health has identified and is investing in 10 Health Moonshots, with the long-term goal of improving the health and wellbeing of everyone in the world. With the world’s largest digital health portfolio (more than 18590 companies spanning 5 continents, 18 countries and 60+ cities), StartUp Health’s long-term platform for entrepreneurs includes the StartUp Health Academy, StartUp Health Network, StartUp Health Media and StartUp Health Ventures. Founded by Steven Krein and Unity Stoakes, StartUp Health is chaired by former Time Warner CEO Jerry Levin. It’s notable strategic partners and investors include AARP; Aurora Health Care; California Health Care Foundation; Children’s Hospital Colorado; University of Colorado; UCHealth; Steve Case; Mark Cuban; Esther Dyson; Brad Feld; Genentech; GE Ventures; Janssen Research & Development, LLC.; Kaiser Permanente Ventures; Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and SeventySix Capital. To learn more, please visit http://www.startuphealth.com. Reported by PRWeb 21 hours ago.

Metro Denver unemployment rate rises to 3.1%

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Metro Denver's unadjusted unemployment rate stood at 3.1 percent in January, up from 2.6 percent in December but lower than the year-ago rate of 3.5 percent in January 2016, according to raw county jobs estimates released Monday by the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment. The 3.1 percent unadjusted jobless rate is for a 10-county area that includes Denver, Aurora, Lakewood, Broomfield and Centennial, but not Boulder County. The rate was the same with Boulder County included, however. -… Reported by bizjournals 16 hours ago.

Animal Control claims longtime family dog is wolf hybrid, won't return him to owners

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A family said Animal Control in Aurora, Colorado took their dog and won't give him back, claiming the dog is a wolf-hybrid. Reported by FOXNews.com 14 hours ago.

Jennifer Gaines of The Gaines Advantage, EXIT Realty DTC Honored With the 2017 Rising Star Real Estate Agent Award

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Jennifer Gaines named one of Denver’s up-and-coming real estate agents.

Aurora, CO (PRWEB) March 14, 2017

Five Star Professional is pleased to announce Jennifer Gaines, The Gaines Advantage, EXIT Realty, has been chosen as one of Denver’s Rising Star Real Estate Agents for 2017.

Five Star Professional partnered with 5280 magazine to recognize a select group of Denver-area real estate professionals who, in only a short period of time as agents, have performed at a high level with strong client satisfaction. Jennifer Gaines is featured, along with other award winners, in a special section of the March issue.

“I feel blessed to receive this award! It shows how hard I work to gain a FIVE star review from every client and agent I work with on both sides of the transaction. Thank you to my clients for putting your trust in me and for choosing me as your real estate agent! I've truly enjoyed working with everyone and am blessed to have so many great new friends!” said Jennifer Gaines.

As part of the Rising Star Real Estate Agent award program, agents are measured using an objective, in-depth research methodology with significant focus on customer feedback, sales volume and overall satisfaction.

“I am an experienced REALTOR who LOVES helping clients achieve their home buying and selling goals with no personal agenda. I AM the REALTOR that WORKS for you! Call me before buying or selling your next home!” stated Jennifer.

“Rising Star Real Estate Agent award winners are agents to watch. Based on their impressive sales volume, transactions and client service they show tremendous potential to excel in the profession for years to come,” says Jonathan Wesser, Research Director, Five Star Professional.

When asked why she became a real estate agent, Gaines said, “I've always wanted to be a Real Estate Agent. I love working with and helping people and now that I'm in a place in life where I have the knowledge and financial security, I can excel and build my business around community and service!”

About the research process:

Now entering its 14th year, Five Star Professional conducts in-depth, market-specific research in more than 45 markets across North America to identify premium service professionals.

Five Star Professional contacts recent homebuyers and seasoned real estate professionals to identify Rising Star award candidates who are strong performers, provide superior customer service and embody professional excellence. Candidates are also evaluated on objective criteria such as experience, production levels and disciplinary and complaint history.

Real estate agents do not pay a fee to be considered or awarded. For more information, visit http://www.fivestarprofessional.com. Reported by PRWeb 12 hours ago.

Business Q&A: Colorado Fabrics, Aurora

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Colorado Fabrics isn't so much a fabric store, but a "sewing destination," says the president of the company. Reported by Denver Post 10 hours ago.

Aurora Crime Blotter: Stove-top oven stolen from storage shed

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The maintenance manager of an apartment complex in the 500 block of Potomac Street called police Feb. 21 because someone broke into the storage shed a stole a stove-top oven. Reported by Denver Post 10 hours ago.

Massive, mixed-use community planned for Aurora Aerotropolis site, could house 60,000 people

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A 2,900-acre community of homes, parks, offices and shopping districts could start taking shape this year on the vacant plains of east Aurora, pending approvals from local lawmakers. Reported by Denver Post 10 hours ago.

Instagram captures stunning electric blue 'sea sparkle' phenomenon

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What sorcery is this? 

Preservation Bay on Tasmania's north-west coast glowed bright shades of blue over the weekend, and Instagram in particular, was not disappointed.

The effect was thanks to a bloom of bioluminescent algae, making it look otherworldly to say the least.

SEE ALSO: This hair dye changes color based on your environment

"It was very interesting watching this iridescent aquamarine colour light up the waves as they crashed," photographer Brett Chatwin told The Advocate. 

"It was as good as shooting the Aurora Australis, but a bit easier." 



A post shared by Brett Chatwin (@brett.chatwin) on Mar 12, 2017 at 9:50pm PDTRead more...



More about Bioluminescent, Bioluminescence, Tasmania, Australia, and Watercooler Reported by Mashable 9 hours ago.

BioConnect and Suprema to Debut Facial Recognition, Biometric Cabinet Lock, Cybersecurity and Mobile Solutions at ISC West 2017

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BioConnect and Suprema will be at ISC West 2017 demonstrating the newest innovations in biometrics, security and identity in booth #22075. New facial recognition, dual-factor cabinet lock, cybersecurity and mobile solutions are being demonstrated in the joint booth.

Toronto, ON (PRWEB) March 15, 2017

With cybersecurity issues seemingly evermore prevalent and the development of more user friendly security solutions such as mobile and contactless biometric, security professionals are consistently seeking out ways to protect both physical and logical applications.  BioConnect and Suprema are pleased to address these issues with a focus on Biometrics, Security and Identity at ISC West 2017 at booth 22075 and invite security professionals to learn more.

New Suprema FaceStation 2, Facial Recognition

Suprema will debut the new FaceStation 2, a facial recognition device with multi-card support. The FaceStation 2 is the next generation of the FaceStation, and as a contactless facial recognition device with an adjustable wall bracket to accommodate different heights, it is very user friendly. It boasts an incredibly fast and accurate matching speed (1:3,000 matches in one second) and captures both static and dynamic templates, giving it the ability to constantly evolve and sustain a more exact understanding of the daily changing expressions of the face. The device also offers multi-factor authentication options with a RF card (HID Seos, iClass, Prox) and PIN. It also can operate in much harsher lighting conditions than other competing facial recognition devices with an operating illuminance of up to 25,000 lux. 

New BioConnect ID CabinetShield, Dual-Factor Cabinet Lock

BioConnect colocation customers expressed the need to provide dual-factor authentication from the front door all the way to the cabinet to address both compliance and their customer security requirements. In the past, solutions to meet these requirements at the server cabinet were limited.

To address this problem, BioConnect created BioConnect ID CabinetShield a dual-factor fingerprint plus card lock to secure server cabinets. With biometric (fingerprint) and card support, the lock is manufactured to fit most of the common cabinets and can be easily integrated with over 25 various access control solutions making installation and enrolment much simpler and sustainable. The BioConnect team has completed multiple successful pilots of the solution in flagship data centers across North America.

New BioConnect ID Mobile, Biometrics for Mobile App Security

With companies going global in footprint and supporting a more mobile workforce than ever, BioConnect’s partners are fast-developing solutions where mobile credentials are replacing plastic cards. BioConnect ID is at the core of every biometric service offered by BioConnect and simplifies the deployment of biometrics. BioConnect will debut BioConnect ID in the form of an API/SDK and mobile app to enable enterprises to take advantage of biometrics (face, voice, fingerprint, eyeprint) within their mobile app. BioConnect will be demonstrating partner mobile apps that are secured by BioConnect ID. 

New BioConnect ID Cybershield, End-to-End Physical Security that Meets IT Requirements 

BioConnect and Suprema are very excited to debut BioConnect ID Cybershield, a complete end-to-end physical security solution that meets IT requirements. BioConnect ID Cybershield incorporates Suprema BioStation 2 fingerprint plus card access device integrated with leading access control solutions. It boasts software customizations that meet the requirements of network security from how the device communicates to the panel, to the network, how the data is stored and can even support an enterprise transitioning to newer network protocols such as 802.1x and IPv6. The solution will be demonstrated with Software House CCURE 9000 access control. 

BioConnect ID Enterprise - BioConnect’s integration software and Suprema biometric terminals supporting evolving industry standards such as OSDP, iClass, SEOS.

BioConnect is consistently integrating the leading biometric solutions on the market to offer flexibility to grow in the future. BioConnect and Suprema will demonstrate how Suprema devices and BioConnect ID CabinetShield seamlessly integrate with Lenel OnGuard, Brivo OnAir, AMAG Symmetry, Genetec Security Center and Keyscan Aurora access control solutions with BioConnect ID Enterprise. 

Suprema and BioConnect are also consistently updating their biometric offerings to support evolving industry standards such as a communication protocols (such as OSDP) and card types such as HID iClass and SEOS. These updates will be on display at Booth #22075.

BioConnect and Suprema are looking forward to meeting with security professionals at ISC West. Request a meeting on BioConnect’s website or stop by booth #22075 to see the top biometric solutions in the market. Reported by PRWeb 2 hours ago.

Wettstein Agencies Joins SafeHouse Denver in Organizing Charity Effort to Benefit Regional Victims of Domestic Violence

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Wettstein Agencies, a Denver area firm providing insurance and financial assistance services to residential and commercial clients throughout central Colorado, is joining local nonprofit SafeHouse Denver in a charity drive to raise local support for victims of domestic abuse

Aurora, CO (PRWEB) March 15, 2017

Wettstein Agencies, a central Colorado agency that provides asset protection and financial consulting assistance to communities throughout the Denver region, is joining the SafeHouse Denver organization for a charity event that promises to provide regional support to survivors of domestic violence.

SafeHouse Denver has been providing domestic abuse victims with emergency shelter and critical services since 1977. In addition, SafeHouse operates a counseling and advocacy center for both adults and children, and all residents enjoy access to on-site counseling, domestic violence support groups, legal assistance, and referrals to other local anti-abuse resources.

“For a generation, SafeHouse Denver has provided abuse victims with a safe place to rest and heal, and our goal is to help eradicate abuse in our community by working with organizations like SafeHouse,” says the owner and acting manager of Wettstein Agencies, Mitchell Wettstein.

In an effort to improve community support and gather donations for the SafeHouse Denver charity drive, the Wettstein Agencies team is connecting with regional civic leaders, case workers, and anti-abuse advocates over social media and email. A strong surge of local support is also expected from a full length article on the charity event soon to be published in the firm’s online magazine “Our Hometown”: http://wettsteinagencies.com/magazines/.

As members of the national charity support network “Agents of Change,” Wettstein and his team have worked with several other Denver area charitable organizations over recent months. Going forward, the Wettstein team plans to continue assisting a new regional nonprofit every sixty days.

Details on how to take action by joining Wettstein Agencies and SafeHouse Denver during this ongoing charity event have been made available for all readers from the following page: http://wettsteinagencies.com/causes/bright-future-domestic-violence-victims/. All the charitable foundations and nonprofits assisted by the Wettstein Agencies over time will be permanently featured on the firm’s growing list of Denver area Community Causes: http://wettsteinagencies.com/community/.

About Wettstein Agencies    

As a Personal Finance Representative in Aurora, Colorado, agency owner Mitchell Wettstein knows many local families. His knowledge and understanding of the people in his community ensures that clients of Wettstein Agencies are provided with an outstanding level of service. Mitchell and his team look forward to helping families protect the things that are most important - family, home, car and more. Wettstein Agencies also offers clients a preparation strategy for achieving their financial goals. To contact an expert at Wettstein Agencies, visit http://wettsteinagencies.com/ or call (720) 263-6821 in Aurora or (303) 750-5959 in Castle Rock. Reported by PRWeb 22 hours ago.

Behind The Tutus, Ballet Is A Boys' Club. This Ballerina Wants To Fix That.

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Ballerina Ashley Bouder is crying. She’s standing alone in a rehearsal studio in front of 20 or so dance journalists and several funders of her small self-titled ballet company, and she’s crying. And I’m pretty sure it’s my fault.

She’s just finished showing us a snippet of pas de deux that she choreographed, and that she’ll perform in just over a week’s time with her fellow New York City Ballet principal dancer Andrew Veyette. The entire evening of dancing is devoted to women choreographers and to women composers. In over 15 years of dancing with City Ballet, Bouder tells the assembled crowd, she’s danced works by about 40 choreographers and can count only seven women among them. She can’t name a single woman composer whose music she’s danced to ― not a single one.

Which brings us to why Bouder is crying. I’ve asked her why it matters to her that more women be allowed to choreograph ballets. What does gender have to do with it?, I ask, channeling the purportedly gender-blind proponents of pure, context-free meritocracy. Ballet is ballet, right? Does it really make a difference if it’s made by a man or a woman?

She takes a deep breath, and begins to answer, her voice breaking before she can get more than a few words out. “I think a lot of it is about telling little girls that they can. I have a daughter. As a kid, I was told that I can’t, a lot. For me, to have my voice be relevant, and for people to listen, is really important. To say what I have to say, even if they don’t like it. I get to say it.” The room erupts into applause, and Bouder wipes her eyes and nods, her short brown ponytail bobbing.

Bouder joined the New York City Ballet at the age of 16, after spending a year in its feeder school. As a member of the corps de ballet, she was soon assigned soloist roles, and quickly promoted to the top rank of principal. For nearly half her life, she’s been dancing in one of the world’s best ballet companies, the keeper of the flame of founding choreographer George Balanchine, whose vocabulary of movement and once-avant garde style long ago became synonymous with American ballet.

Bouder describes herself as a “Balanchine ballerina,” and is admired for her mastery of quick footwork and speedy jumps. Where other ballerinas seem to drape themselves, long and languid, over choreography, Bouder appears to throw herself at it with staccato precision. After watching her attack turns and balances, you wouldn’t be surprised to find that she’d pierced a hole in the stage floor with her pointe shoe.


Notes for my curtain speech at today's NYCB performance: "Ballet is Woman" -George Balanchine #nycbwinter2017 #womensmarchnyc

A post shared by Ashley Bouder (@ashleybouder) on Jan 21, 2017 at 11:12am PST



The lion’s share of choreography performed by City Ballet is by Balanchine, who died in 1983. In his absence, other choreographers have added to the repertory he built with help from Jerome Robbins. Current Ballet Master in Chief Peter Martins, and choreographers Christopher Wheeldon and Justin Peck, in particular, have left their respective marks on the company. You’ve probably noticed one thing those choreographers have in common: They’re all men.

The dearth of women choreographers has confounded parts of the dance world for some time: every few years, the debate over the overrepresentation of men in the ranks of top-tier choreographers, particularly in classical ballet, comes to a new boil before simmering down again. It’s not only choreography where women get short shrift. The ballerina may be the visual symbol of the art form, but behind the scenes, the levers of power and creative control are largely pulled by men. The overwhelming majority of companies in the U.S. are helmed by male artistic directors, and the choreographers they tap are mostly creating work set to music by male composers.

But a few years ago, the debate heated up again when City Ballet performed a program entitled “21st Century Choreographers,” featuring work by a handful of young modern ballet dance-makers, every single one of them a white man. The poster was jarring in its uniformity, and people took notice. “How can an art form be alive,” Dance magazine asked, “when it excludes so many?”“Women bring a point of view that men don’t have,” Bouder tells me later in a phone interview. “But it doesn’t have to be anything particularly different to the table. It’s about having an equal voice to express our opinions and our feelings, too.” She says that because she’s in a position of power ― a top-tier dancer at a top-tier company, with a sizeable fan base and following. She wants to use it to speak out about inequities in the ballet world. “People will listen, and I think choreography by women just needs to be seen and heard.”

Starting this week, she’s also walking the talk. The Ashley Bouder Project is teaming up with New York Jazzharmonic for an evening of women-created works: two new ballets, both choreographed by women and set to music by women, and the revival of a Susan Stroman ballet set to music by Duke Ellington. They’ll all be danced by Bouder and her friends from City Ballet, including several fellow principals.


The dancers of The Ashley Bouder Project rocking International Women's Day in RED. Working to showcase women choreographers and composers this March 17 and 18 at Symphony Space. Ticket link in profile. #internationalwomensday #wearred #theashleybouderproject #choreographer #ballerina #thefutureisfemale #changingtheconversation

A post shared by Ashley Bouder (@ashleybouder) on Mar 8, 2017 at 3:07pm PST



Other, more established companies have begun to put on similar programs. Pacific Northwest Ballet presented one last year, and the Cincinnati Ballet just announced that in their upcoming season, eight out of 15 choreographers whose work will be performed are women, five of whom are presenting world premieres.

Bouder hopes that City Ballet will be more conscious as it crafts its programs and picks choreographers, too. The pale male poster fail “was a big turning point,” Bouder said. “It’s not like any of those choreographers on that poster of five white men didn’t deserve to be there. They’re all talented, they all have great voices, and they’re creative and their ballets are good. But it’s really shocking when you go past the poster and you see five men who look almost identical in their black-and-white headshots!”

Negative media coverage of the homogenous programming had an effect, she notes: the next fall season the company performed works by two women, Annabelle Lopez Ochoa and principal dancer Lauren Lovette. “That was wonderful,” Bouder said. “There was a response to that criticism and that public outcry of ‘Where are the women?’” She hopes the small uptick in the inclusion of women isn’t a flash in the pan or a short-lived trend. “We’re such a big company, and people really follow the example of the New York City Ballet, so I hope they will continue to foster the contributions of women in the company. I hope that continues, and I think that it will.”

Boulder says that companies have a responsibility to help close the gender gap in choreography, long before it comes time to craft an all-women or women-heavy program. “I think that special attention needs to be paid, especially in places that foster creativity and choreography, to fostering those young female choreographers and giving them a little bit more attention,” Bouder said. “A little more of a chance to develop, and listening to them a little more when they’re young and say they want to choreograph.” The New York City Choreographic Institute, which is affiliated with City Ballet and has trained many of today’s leading ballet choreographers, should heed her advice: their list of alumni is almost comically male-dominated.

Though companies have a role to play, Bouder points out that some of the inequities that make it easier for men to be creative and to start learning to choreograph early are built into the fabric of the art form. For dancers in the corps, “when a lot of people are young and they have ideas and they want to do things,” the workload for women is heavier than it is for men. In most ballet companies, because of how ballets are structured, women perform more than men. “You put on a ballet like [Balanchine’s Walpurgisnacht Ballet] and there’s one guy and, like, 20 women. [Editor’s Note: It’s actually 24.] At New York City Ballet, our guys dance a lot more, but the women do far more than they do. Even if there are guys who are on every night, there are women who are on in three ballets every night. Which means more rehearsal time, too, during the day. Which means less creative time.” Even women’s stage makeup takes more time, Bouder notes, and so does breaking in and sewing ribbons on to pointe shoes, which professional ballerinas must do on a daily basis. In her early years, Bouder says, “I was on stage every night and then I had to go home and sew my pointe shoes. You’re just preoccupied.” Creativity requires time, and men have more of it than women do.

You need more than time to be bold and take risks — you also need a culture that gives you permission to do it. And Bouder says that boys in ballet are far more likely to get that than girls are. Because girls outnumber boys in ballet schools as well as in companies, she explains, they’re held to a higher disciplinary standard. “There are so many little girls that they need to almost weed them out, the ones who are serious and the ones who aren’t.” So, she says, “you have to be perfect, not only in class but in attitude and decorum and you have to fit in and be quiet. And the boys in some cases are allowed to just get away with murder ... but it doesn’t matter because they’re just trying to keep them in the class and keep them dancing, because you need boys to partner the girls.” This means more freedom outside of the studio, too. “And they’re allowed to be creative and they’re allowed to try things, and girls are not. They can just do whatever as long as they keep showing up.”

And then, the boys become men, and they get to make the ballets and run the companies? I ask. That seems like a pretty raw deal for the women. Bouder agrees. “It’s really unfair when you’ve spent your whole life playing by the rules, only to be stifled.” 


When everyone has a day off, but you have Aurora tomorrow. #familyrehearsal #aurora #nycballetwinter2017 #ballerinamom #thesleepingbeauty

A post shared by Ashley Bouder (@ashleybouder) on Feb 13, 2017 at 1:47pm PST



Bouder became a mother last year, shortly after a video of her doing an eye-popping pirouette combination while almost nine months pregnant went viral. She wasn’t back to full dancing strength in time to work with the two women choreographers whose works were performed at City Ballet this season. So she’s taking matters into her own hands. “I feel like I’ve gotten to the point in my career where I can get a message out and people will listen and maybe I can make a difference.... So that it doesn’t have to be this way. I want to be a voice for that, and I also want to be an example of someone who is actively trying to make a difference.”

Bouder says that having a daughter has changed the way she thinks about which voices get heard, and which get silenced. And it’s also made her more daring outside of the studio and offstage. “Having my daughter just makes me braver,” she says. “It makes me want to step out and do the things that I hope she has the courage to do.”

The Ashley Bouder Project will perform with New York Jazzharmonic Friday, March 17, and Saturday, March 18, at Symphony Space.

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