Friday, February 08, 2008

Military-grade gel-based liquid bandages approved by the FDA

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/231805864/

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Spray-on liquid bandages aren't a new idea by any means, but a company called BioCure has just received FDA approval for a gel-based version designed to treat combat wounds. Developed in conjunction with Rutgers University and the Army, the GelSpray Liquid Bandage is applied with a dual syringe that combines two different polymers that combine into a gel, spreading to cover and protect the wound. The gel only sticks to intact skin, not the wound itself, and it's hard enough to resist abrasion. BioCure is already talking about medicated versions that will treat infection and stop severe bleeding, and the prospect of civilian applications are also on the table -- but no dates have been given, sadly.

[Via Medgadget]

 

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Box.net Adds File Collaboration [Box.net]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/231671990/boxnet-adds-file-collaboration

boxnet_scaled.jpgOnline storage web site Box.net keeps rolling out new features, but opening up stored files to online collaboration adds a whole bunch o' new potential uses at once. Any file you store at Box.net can now be shared with collaborators (who, it must be said, must also have Box.net accounts) and manipulated through any of the sites' web service partners. That means you and your friends could all crop and edit your weekend getaway pictures in Picnik, or edit a trip diary in Zoho, and so forth. Added to desktop mounting and free iCal publishing, Box.net is vying to become almost as handy when you're away from your computer as your trusted thumb drive—maybe even more so.


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Songerize is the "I'm Feeling Lucky" of Online Music [Streaming Media]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/231657251/songerize-is-the-im-feeling-lucky-of-online-music

songerize_cropped2.jpg
Songerize is a dead-simple interface for quickly playing streaming music, and it's destined to become a quick-fix addiction for music fans. Type in a song name, then the artist you think performs it, and hit "Play." If Songerize can find the song, it plays it in an embedded Flash device. If not, try another song. Described as the "I'm Feeling Lucky" button for the more full-featured streaming music search site SeeqPod, Songerize is the perfect tool for clarifying misheard lyrics, quickly playing a song for a friend, or just listening to music one track at a time. Songerize found 8 of 10 songs I threw at it this morning, and I mixed it about halfway between big radio hits and indie hip-hop and rock. Nifty. To get even more out of SeeqPod, download-wise, check out Songbeat.


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Coming Soon: Depositing Checks at Home by Scanner [Software]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/231608495/coming-soon-depositing-checks-at-home-by-scanner

checkscan.jpegSaul Hansel, one of my favorite NYTimes reporters, writes about Fiserv's technology that'll let normal people deposit paper checks to their bank accounts by merely scanning them at home.

USAA, the bank that serves the armed forces, has done this for awhile, but it hasn't picked up beyond there. Although the Check Clearing for the 21st Century Act has made this possible, and half of all business checks are deposited this way already, the system still needs to be safeguarded against fraud before it can really reach mainstream adoption rates. Interesting, but I'd guess the majority of Gizmodo readers use paypal or World of Warcraft gold pieces instead of ye old checkbook. [NYT Bits]


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Seiler Piano Supports Hands, Keys and Cars [Music]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/231622153/seiler-piano-supports-hands-keys-and-cars

suspension1_big-1.jpgThis "suspension" piano by Seiler brings everyone's favorite style of bridge indoors and gives it a soundtrack beyond the typical roar of automobiles drowning out the subtle splashing of suicide jumpers. A meticulously crafted mahogany piano suspended on a cast iron frame, we'd be afraid to even touch a key lest we induce the sound of metal shredding expensive wood. But our guess is that the piano's quite literal delicate balance between fluid fragility and rigid stability is its entire appeal. [seiler via dvice]


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