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A few days after that, i come home from work and hes not there. His brother wont tell me what is going on, but hes on the phone with his girlfriend who wants to tell me. What she tells me is that Jake is gone that night because he found out that side chick had been in the hospital with a tubal pregnancy and that he baby had been his.

Each individual will enter into a lease agreement with Nehemiah and have access to wrap around services provided by Nehemiah (for example: housing, employment, mentoring, and advocacy). There will be random check ins at this property. In addition, Nehemiah will hold regular house meetings with the tenants.

The single channel EEG signal (C3 A2) is initially decomposed and then the desired components are automatically separated. In addition, the noise is removed to enhance the discrimination ability of features. The obtained T F features after preprocessing stage are classified using a multi class support vector machines (SVM) and used for the identification of four sleep stages over three sleep types.

“We are targeting it toward the industrial space, like people in a warehouse who need to pick up packages,” Mike Hallett of Vuzix told AFP, while showing off the eyewear at CES.”The camera on the front could scan bar codes, then tell the person where to find the packages,” he continued. “We are in the airline and medical industries with a lot of applications.”Vuzix wants to cross into the consumer market with applications to enable the devices to check email or translate written languages.”If you are in Japan and don’t speak or read Japanese, it can translate the signs for you and help you get around based on GPS coordinates, right in front of your eye instead of having to look down at the phone,” Hallett said of the eyepiece, priced at $1,000.Vuzix also showed of a new model, which was basically a set of over the ear headphones with a visor like video display that tilted up or down as desired.”It’s a huge, immersive experience,” Hallett said. “People on the go who want a big screen on trains or planes; gamers, or even in the office instead of a monitor on your desk.”The eyewear was expected to be priced in the $500 to $800 range when Vuzix releases them later this year.A history of smart eyewear on display at CES showed gadgets dating back to 1987.”Check out 2002, it looks like you have a buzz saw on your head,” quipped Rhys Filmer of OrCam, an Israel based company behind the display and a device to provide sight to the visually impaired.”A lot of it back then was for the army.”In 2007 eyewear looking like upside down sunglasses debuted and were used on flights to give first class passengers immersive movie viewing, according to the timeline on display.”Our device is more remedial, specifically for people with low vision or legally blind,” Filmer said.The OrCam mini camera clips to eyeglass frames and has a bone conduction speaker that presses against a wearer’s temple.It lets a person point to what they want read, whether in a book or newspaper or on a street sign or approaching bus, and then treats that as a starting point to begin speaking the words.The OrCam device should hit the market in about six months at a price of $2,500, according to Filmer.”All of this technology is going to help you function and be more independent,” Filmer said of the trend in building computing power into eyewear.”Instead of pulling out your phone, what you want is going to be showing up in your glasses.

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