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There's a new tool available to help you make more environmentally-friendly choices while you shop, but the creator of the new technology needs your help. Creator Jamie McCroskery really loves the outdoors, and that passion took him to South America. “One day I was paddling down these fjords and saw these endless series of salmon fishing farms, which locals told me were destroying the environment through all this pollution,” McCroskery recalled.And that was when he got an idea. “It dawned on me that day, paddling in the ocean, that it seems strange that people who have the most access to information, the most resources can’t even figure out what to put on their dinner plate without violating their personal values,” he said. McCroskery has a special skill. He's helped build major technology products for companies like Dropbox and Glossier. “People are always going to be shopping for things. That’s how you have to survive, so why not help them make better choices while shopping,” he said.So, he created 1029
This week Elon Musk unveiled his most sci-fi project thus far: a computer chip connected to exceptionally slender wires with electrodes on them, all of which is meant to be embedded in a person's brain by a surgical robot. The implant would connect wirelessly to a small behind-the-ear receiver that could communicate with a computer.Musk hopes the implant, created by his brain-computer interface startup Neuralink, could one day help quadriplegics control smartphones, and perhaps even endow users with a sort of telepathy. Like existing brain-machine interfaces, it would collect electrical signals sent out by the brain and interpret them as actions.Neuralink, which was founded in 2016, 704

Three high school students in Martin County are recovering after investigators say they overdosed at two schools Tuesday and had to be hospitalized.The Martin County Sheriff’s Office said the students smoked THC vape pens that were laced with an unknown substance, possibly a narcotic.Now, investigators hope to determine how the students got their hands on the laced vape pens in the first place, whether they created the concoction themselves, or if they obtained the pens from a mutual source.Martin County Schools Superintendent Laurie Gaylord called parents Tuesday afternoon to warn them of the discovery of students using vape pens on school campuses. The message said in part, "The sheriff’s office believes there is a likelihood that more students may come to be in possession of the pens and may inhale or ingest the toxins in the future.”Just after noon on Tuesday, Lt. Ryan Grimsdale said deputies were notified that a female student at South Fork High School was having a medical emergency.“It was relayed to us that they were having a seizure," Grimsdale said.Within a couple hours of that call, Grimsdale said a female and a male student at Martin County High School also had medical issues, not as severe as the one reported at South Fork High School, but at least one of the students was also going in and out of consciousness.“The symptoms were similar, but not as severe. Upset stomach and things of that nature.”Grimsdale said this is the first time he has heard of the laced vape pens making their way into local schools.He says the issue as a whole of vape pens being used to ingest harmful or illegal substances is becoming a statewide issue.“What we’re looking at now actually statewide is an epidemic where these have become the primary method for consumption of illegal substances,” Grimsdale said. Miami is seeing the worst of it, according to Grimsdale.Martin County High School parent Deborah Pelletier was concerned after getting the call from the school.“We have to look out for each other. These are not good times,” said Pelletier.She said she will be taking the advice provided by the school.“We’re going to discuss it with my granddaughter here, I am also her guardian, and I’m not quite sure what to make of it yet.”Grimsdale also offers the following advice to parents: "Be involved. Pay attention. These vape pens, if you don’t know what they are look them up. Know what they look like and what to look for. Go through their book bags, look through their rooms to be actively involved, educated and informed. Pay attention.”"Kids are supposed to go to school and sitting in classrooms being educated and getting yelled at for running down the hallway. They’re not supposed to be getting transported out by ambulance because of a drug overdose,” Grimsdale said.The Martin County Sheriff’s Office said about 100 citations have been written for students who have brought vape pens to school this school year. None of those citations indicate the vape pens were laced with anything illicit. Multiple Martin County students overdosed today on vape pens mixed with another dangerous substance. 3138
The remains of Maleah Davis have been identified, authorities said Monday.Located in Arkansas on Friday during a search, the remains now have been positively identified as those of the missing 4-year-old girl, the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences said.The cause and manner of her death are still pending, according to the forensic institute.Maleah was reported missing in early May by her mother's former fiancé, Derion Vence. Vence initially told police that Maleah had been abducted by a group of men -- but investigators found signs of decay in his car and blood evidence in his apartment.Earlier Friday, Houston police had said child remains found in a bag in southwest Arkansas might belong to Maleah. 730
Those who live in El Paso, Texas—a city that lives on the U.S. and Mexico borders—describes their home as a loving place.“Everybody knows everybody, seems that way,” says resident Ruben Vuentes. Vuentes says the people of El Paso are not close-minded. Resident Alicia Brown shares the same sentiment. She says she’s never felt out of place because of the color of her skin. “There’s no racism here,” she says. “I don’t feel it. I’ve never felt it in all my life.”Now, those living in the close-knit community are trying to heal after a gunman killed 22 people and injured dozens of others Saturday at a local Walmart. Police say the 21-year-old white, male suspect is believed to be the author of a racist, anti-Hispanic 2,300-word document found online. Police say the manifesto was filled with white nationalist language and blamed immigrants for taking away jobs. El Paso has found itself at the center of the Trump administration’s hardline stance on immigration due to its proximity to the border. Marisa Limon Garza with the Hope Border Institute says the community is family and that include El Pasoans and Mexican nationals, just across the border in Juarez. “These border lands, these fences, these structures, are things that were imposed on us,” she says. But this has been a binational community for so long, and it’s one we find great beauty in.”It’s a melting pot of immigrants and Mexican nationals, and the community sees it as an asset. “This city is surviving because of the people coming from Juarez, says Brown. “What people don’t realize is they are part of this economy. The people that were at Walmart, they were shopping for clothes, school supplies, just like all of us.”Brown says when the shooting happened, she did worry the community—this family—might have been shattered. But that isn’t the case.“Because really, he didn’t; he brought us together. He united us,” Brown says of the shooter. 1931
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