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Birmingham’s Kenya Staples on Refreshing Your Skin and Renewing Your Spirit

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Kenya Staples, founder/chemist of Dear Sunday Skincare. (Provided Photo)

By Nicole S. Daniel

The Birmingham Times

Landmark Settlement Will Safeguard Birmingham Area’s Drinking Water Source

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Lake Purdy boat launch (Erin Nelson, Starnes Media)

By Barnett Wright

The Birmingham Times

$1M Grant from Truist Foundation Helps Birmingham Residents With Career Training

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Shakita Rivers shares how STRIVE Birmingham helped develop a career path for her to become a registered nurse. (Ryan Michaels, For The Birmingham Times)

By Ryan Michaels

The Birmingham Times

MoCaFi to Host Wealth Building Panel at BCRI on Saturday, Aug. 26

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On Saturday, MoCaFi will host a wealth building panel on how to move from lease to mortgage. (Screengrab MoCaFi)

By Nicole S. Daniel

The Birmingham Times

From Green Skies To AI-Infused Healthcare: Microsoft’s Pioneering Moves In Tech

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Today's top stories for Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: a href=https://www.Zenger News.com/stock/msft#NASDAQMSFT/a) highlight a significant sustainable aviation fuel purchase, an expanded partnership with Epic for AI-driven healthcare solutions, and the introduction of Python capabilities in Excel. PHOTO BY PLAYGROUND/UNSPLASH



By Mohit Manghnani

Today’s top stories for Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT) highlight a significant sustainable aviation fuel purchase, an expanded partnership with Epic for AI-driven healthcare solutions, and the introduction of Python capabilities in Excel.


International Airlines Group (IAG) and Microsoft have inked a deal marking the most substantial co-funded sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) acquisition, amounting to 14,700 tons, sourced from Phillips 66 (NYSE: PSX). 

This acquisition is in line with IAG’s ambition to incorporate 10% SAF in all its flights by 2030. Microsoft’s collaboration aligns with its goals to slash emissions from business travel and air cargo, contributing to a reduction in its Scope 3 emissions.

Today’s top stories for Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT) highlight a significant sustainable aviation fuel purchase, an expanded partnership with Epic for AI-driven healthcare solutions, and the introduction of Python capabilities in Excel. PHOTO BY PLAYGROUND/UNSPLASH

This pact signifies a pivotal step in SAF procurement, allowing Microsoft to tackle emissions from its business voyages and cloud supply chain freight. It also paves the way for future SAF advancements and market expansion, Airport Technology reports.

Epic has broadened its alliance with Microsoft to infuse artificial intelligence (AI) into healthcare on a grand scale. 

The joint venture seeks to integrate conversational, ambient, and generative AI technologies into clinical processes, enhancing patient care, boosting operational efficiency, and upholding the financial stability of health systems. 

As part of this initiative, Epic unveiled new EHR features, including the assimilation of Nuance’s Dragon Ambient eXperience (DAX) Express AI tech into the Epic Hyperdrive platform and the Haiku mobile app. Furthermore, Epic showcased an AI-driven solution offering medical coding personnel suggestions based on EHR documentation, simplifying coding and billing processes. 

This collaboration underscores the strategic partnerships that can swiftly amplify the availability of actionable AI solutions for healthcare entities and their patients, EHR Intelligence reports.

Microsoft is launching a public preview of Python integration in Excel, enabling users to embed Python code within their spreadsheets effortlessly. 

Exclusively available on Windows systems for now, this feature eradicates the need for extra software or add-ons. 

Today’s top stories for Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT) highlight a significant sustainable aviation fuel purchase, an expanded partnership with Epic for AI-driven healthcare solutions, and the introduction of Python capabilities in Excel. PHOTO BY PLAYGROUND/UNSPLASH

The introduction of the “PY” function facilitates the merging of Python data into Excel grids, granting access to renowned Python libraries such as pandas and Matplotlib. 

This integration simplifies the workflow for data scientists, allowing them to script and run Python without exiting Excel. 

Moreover, Python in Excel operates within the Microsoft Cloud, ensuring top-tier security and facilitating collaboration via platforms like Microsoft Teams and Outlook, Daily Host News reports.

 

Produced in association with Benzinga



Ammonia Could Be The Next Big Thing In Carbon-free Fuel

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When you think of ammonia, you might imagine your home cleaning supplies. If you’re a farmer, you know that ammonia is the basis for most fertilizers. PHOTO BY TIMON STUDLER/UNSPLASH



By

When you think of ammonia, you might imagine your home cleaning supplies. If you’re a farmer, you know that ammonia is the basis for most fertilizers.


But ammonia is also a promising source of carbon-free fuel.

It’s energy dense like oil but non-polluting. Ammonia packs 20 time the energy of a lithium-ion electric battery. It is liquid at room temperatures, so it doesn’t need an enormous amount of electricity to be extra-cooled like hydrogen (another alternative to fossil fuels), which only becomes liquid at minus 423.17 degrees Fahrenheit.

Ammonia is neither as flammable nor as explosive as hydrogen or gasoline.

When you think of ammonia, you might imagine your home cleaning supplies. If you’re a farmer, you know that ammonia is the basis for most fertilizers. PHOTO BY TIMON STUDLER/UNSPLASH

All this makes ammonia exactly the sort of fuel alternative that should make it possible to wean ships, trucks and possibly even planes off of fossil fuels. (Passenger vehicles, other than a few exceptions like Toyota’s hydrogen-powered Mirai, are solidly on the electric battery train.)

Getting there, however, requires green production, using renewable energy sources to power the reactions. Otherwise, ammonia production is particularly polluting: Producing a ton of ammonia generates 2.5 tons of CO2.

Israeli startup Nitrofix has developed another approach.

Instead of relying on large amounts of externally generated electricity – green or otherwise – Nitrofix is working on a specialized catalyst that reduces by 90% the amount of energy needed to produce ammonia.

The catalyst was invented by chemist Prof. Ronny Neumann of the Weizmann Institute of Science. Nitrofix worked with the Weizmann’s Yeda technology transfer company to license the tech for commercialization.

Ammonia consists of one nitrogen atom and three hydrogen atoms (NH3). Nitrofix combines nitrogen from the air with hydrogen extracted from water to make ammonia.

It’s a renewable energy dream: Just mix air and water and you get a fuel as powerful as oil and the only byproduct is oxygen. That’s one reason for the company’s name.

“We ‘fix’ nitrogen,” Nitrofix CEO Ophira Melamed tells ISRAEL21c.

Nitrofix’s catalyst is “an organo-metal compound that holds the nitrogen for the reaction, thus reducing the activation energy required,” Melamed clarifies.

By “organo-metal,” Melamed means that the catalyst compound contains both organic carbons and oxides as well as some metal atoms such as iron.

When you think of ammonia, you might imagine your home cleaning supplies. If you’re a farmer, you know that ammonia is the basis for most fertilizers. PHOTO BY TIMON STUDLER/UNSPLASH

Nitrofix’s approach differs from other ammonia-production methods, which require the production of hydrogen gas, rather than water, from which to extract the appropriate atoms.

Hydrogen gas has the downside of containing methane, which has a tendency to leak out of pipes. The US Environmental Protection Agency estimates that methane has 28 to 36 times the warming potential of CO2.

Nitrofix hopes to improve on the “Haber-Bosch approach” used by most other ammonia production firms.

Haber-Bosch has two steps. The first is the production of hydrogen gas. The second is a reaction between that gas and nitrogen. Most Haber-Bosch-based facilities use fossil fuels to power the hydrogen production.

“It requires high temperatures and high pressure — 300 degrees Celsius and 400 atmospheres, both of which are very energy intensive,” Melamed explains. “We’re doing it at room temperature, at 50 degrees Celsius, with 10 atmospheres of pressure.”

Ammonia as a shipping fuel

Shipping is where ammonia-as-a-fuel is already seeing some forward movement.

It makes sense: Shipping emits over one billion tons of carbon each year. If it were a country, that would make shipping the sixth-largest emitter in the world after China, the United States, India, Russia and Japan.

There are no ships currently running on ammonia, although Nitrofix CEO Ophira Melamed says the first vessel will launch later this year. That ship, the Kriti Future, is owned by Avin International of Greece.

Another ammonia-powered ship, a 1957 tugboat docked in New York, is being retrofitted by a different ammonia startup, Amogy.

Until ammonia-based ships arrive, there are plenty of uses for green ammonia on land. Around 160 million metric tons of ammonia are used annually, 80% of it for making fertilizers.

Ammonia is also used as a refrigerant gas, for water purification and in the manufacture of plastics, explosives, textiles, pesticides, dyes and other chemicals.

Non-transportation industries also care about getting to carbon-zero, if mainly for the bragging rights.

“Hair coloring needs ammonia,” Melamed tells ISRAEL21c. “It’s important for those manufacturers to have sustainability on the label. McDonald’s also wants its customers to know that the potatoes it makes its fries out of are harvested and shipped emission-free.”

Green ammonia can also act as a safer and more affordable way to transport hydrogen. The hydrogen is carried by ammonia in liquid form, and then “cracked” to release the hydrogen only at its destination. The infrastructure for transporting ammonia has long been established.

Nitrofix was founded in August 2022 and completed the HAX incubator sponsored by San Francisco-based SOSV, which specializes in “deep tech for planetary and human health.”

The six-person staff is based in Petah Tikva and just announced a $3.1 million seed round led by Clean Energy Ventures. So far, they’ve built a small prototype.

“We’ll start producing very small quantities of ammonia,” says Melamed, who has a PhD in chemistry. “Then we’ll optimize the performance before looking to scale up to a larger system.”

Melamed says she hopes Nitrofix will have a commercial product ready to sell by the end of 2025 or early 2026. The demand for ammonia is expected to increase threefold by 2050.

“Our goal is to accelerate the production of sustainable green ammonia at cost parity to meet the increasing demand for this essential compound,” Melamed adds.

Nitrofix will license its technology to small manufacturers. Once Nitrofix can make enough ammonia on its own “at industrial scale,” it will sell that direct to customers.

Clean Energy Ventures managing partner Daniel Goldman says Nitrofix “was the only company we assessed to disrupt the conventional fossil energy approach [to] create an economic path to decarbonizing a global industry.”

Produced in association with ISRAEL21c



Elon Musk Flexes ‘Truth In Advertising’ On X Versus Instagram

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strongThe new (Twitter) logo rebranded as X displayed on mobile with Elon Musk in the background, seen in this illustration in Brussels, Belgium on 20 August 2023. The internet billionaire has emphasized the value of truth and Community Notes in his most recent comparison post between Elon Musk's X, formerly Twitter, and Meta Platforms Instagram.  JONATHAN RAA/NURPHOTO/GETTY IMAGES/strong



By Ananya Gairola

In the latest comparison post between Elon Musk’s X, formerly Twitter, and Meta Platforms Instagram, the tech billionaire has highlighted the importance of “truth” and Community Notes.  


What Happened: On Tuesday, a graphic designer at Dogecoin took to X and raised a red flag regarding a sponsored gameplay advertisement. 

The user, who goes by the name Doge Designer on the microblogging site, said that a sponsored ad that misled users got Community Noted on X, wherever the identical advertisement on Instagram was being promoted without undergoing any fact verification. 

The new (Twitter) logo rebranded as X displayed on mobile with Elon Musk in the background, seen in this illustration in Brussels, Belgium on 20 August 2023. The internet billionaire has emphasized the value of “truth” and Community Notes in his most recent comparison post between Elon Musk’s X, formerly Twitter, and Meta Platforms Instagram.  JONATHAN RAA/NURPHOTO/GETTY IMAGES

The ad in question is Envoy Games.

In response, Musk, who acquired Twitter for $44 billion last year and rebranded it to X, said, “Finally having truth in advertising is awesome.” 

Finally having truth in advertising is awesome

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) August 22, 2023

Community Notes, previously known as Birdwatch, made a comeback in December 2022 under the ownership of Musk. This unique feature empowers users to append notes to potentially misleading posts. 

In June, Mark Zuckerberg also commended the feature saying that by adding flags Musk’s social media platform is working on improving user experience rather than removing information. 

At the time, the Meta CEO also stated that the tech giant had been developing advanced AI systems capable of detecting and categorizing harmful content.

The Zuckerberg-Musk Feud: The latest post has added a new chapter to the ongoing rivalry between Musk and Zuckerberg. 

The feud gained momentum following the debut of Instagram’s Threads, a text-based application launched in July. Threads was positioned as a direct competitor to X, but its popularity reportedly experienced fluctuations after an initial surge in user sign-ups.

Why It’s Important: Earlier this year, Musk expressed confidence in the new Twitter CEO, Linda Yaccarino, stating that “almost all of the advertisers have said that, they’ve either come back or they said they will come back.”

The new (Twitter) logo rebranded as X displayed on mobile with Elon Musk in the background, seen in this illustration in Brussels, Belgium on 20 August 2023. The internet billionaire has emphasized the value of “truth” and Community Notes in his most recent comparison post between Elon Musk’s X, formerly Twitter, and Meta Platforms Instagram.  JONATHAN RAA/NURPHOTO/GETTY IMAGES

Previously, Twitter, now X, had experienced an advertiser exodus, with many companies suspending their advertising spending on the platform over fears that their ads would appear near hate speech, disinformation, or other controversial content.

 

Produced in association with Benzinga



Startup Aiming To Keep Kidney Patients Off Dialysis

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strongCurespec’s Nephrospec device. The Israeli company Curespec, situated in Yehud-Monosson, says that its novel product, Nephrospec, can delay the dialysis regimen for CKD patients in stages three and four by up to 12 months. CURESPEC/strong



By Yulia Karra

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) affects an estimated 10% of the world, which is just under 800 million people. 


According to the US-based National Kidney Foundation, 90% of people affected by the disease don’t know they have it at the early stages, allowing it to progress undetected. 

In some cases, CKD is caught only at “end stage,” when kidneys are failing and require either a transplant or dialysis — a grueling, weekly procedure to remove waste and excess fluid from the blood. The average survival rate of dialysis patients is five years.

Nephrospec

Curespec, based in Yehud-Monosson in Israel, claims its unique device, Nephrospec, can postpone the dialysis treatment of stage three and four CKD patients by up to 12 months. 

The treatment promotes new blood-vessel formation and restores damaged tissue function after six painless treatment sessions over a three-week period. 

Curespec’s Nephrospec device. Photo courtesy of Curespec
Curespec’s Nephrospec device. The Israeli company Curespec, situated in Yehud-Monosson, says that its novel product, Nephrospec, can delay the dialysis regimen for CKD patients in stages three and four by up to 12 months. CURESPEC

“There is currently no cure for CKD, only medication that can slow its progress,” Curespec CEO Rotem Kaynan said. 

Kaynan, a biomedical engineer, says the startup is hoping that one day Nephrospec could keep CKD patients off dialysis indefinitely. 

“CKD patients are normally in a constant state of deterioration. Our expectation is that with this treatment, they remain in the maintenance stage for as long as possible.”

Curespec began as a department at Medispec, a medical device manufacturer founded in 1992 by Avner Spector — a mechanical engineer with many years of experience at various medical tech companies. 

Medispec’s main area of expertise is application of electro-hydraulic acoustic therapy (eHAT) — an acoustic wave treatment that uses less intensity than traditional shockwave treatments — to treat cardiological and urological disorders, including erectile dysfunction.

A personal motivation

Three years ago, Medispec began developing Nephrospec — also based on the eHAT application — as a way to try and help the wife of Spector’s good friend, who was suffering from CKD. 

“She ultimately passed away, but during that time we conducted preclinical trials with very nice results,” Kaynan says. 

In November 2021, it was decided to continue with further development of Nephrospec as part of a separate corporate entity. Curespec now boasts five full-time employees and as many registered medical patents encompassing various aspects of the Nephrospec device. 

In July, Spector was announced as the 2023 recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Prize, awarded by the Manufacturers’ Association of Israel.

“I see Nephrospec as the flagship of my industrial activity that offers an opportunity to CKD patients to postpone — or even prevent — dialysis, which can drastically improve their quality of life,” Spector said. 

Hand in hand with hypertension

The company is now working to prove the device’s efficacy by conducting clinical trials with a larger experimental group. 

Nephrospec is also being promoted as an effective treatment for hypertension. 

“CKD and hypertension go hand in hand,” says Kaynan, adding that hypertension is one of the risk factors for developing kidney problems. 

Kaynan says the cost of treating hypertension around the world adds up to around $370 billion a year, while the cost of treating dialysis patients stands at around $100 billion annually. Curespec could lower those costs significantly. “It will save a lot of money for health insurance companies in the US.” 

Kidney dialysis is grueling and costly. Photo by Hospital Man via Shutterstock.com

Nephrospec is compact, designed for easy implementation in any medical facility. For the benefit of clinical trials, the device has already been deployed at Israel’s Sheba Medical Center and Shaare Zedek Medical Center, as well as hospitals in Germany, Switzerland and the United States. 

If the trials are successful, the devices will remain at the respective hospitals as part of the facility’s CKD treatment plan. 

Curespec’s Nephrospec device. Photo courtesy of Curespec
Curespec’s Nephrospec device. The Israeli company Curespec, situated in Yehud-Monosson, says that its novel product, Nephrospec, can delay the dialysis regimen for CKD patients in stages three and four by up to 12 months. CURESPEC

“In Israel, at the initial stage the treatment will be funded by patients themselves, then by private insurance companies and later become part of the healthcare services basket, funded fully by the health system,” Kaynan explains. 

The company has so far raised over $1 million from private investors, in addition to a $3.4 million grant from the Mayo Clinic and an initial $3 million investment from Medispec. Another seed funding round now aims to raise $10 million to complete its clinical trials. 

“What we’re doing is on par with tikkun olam,” says Kaynan, referring to the Jewish value of improving the world. “It sounds dramatic, but it’s true.” 

 

Produced in association with ISRAEL21c