roake
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Apple's stripping out blood oxygen sensing from Apple Watch enough to skirt import ban
charlesn said:roake said:teejay2012 said:tech_traveller said:I am glad. Whether you like or dislike Apple, medical devices should have some exception to other product categories.
That being said, I hope Masimo gets reimbursed for their troubles.Masimo has become a bit of a troll and it seems the ITC has over reached on their decision.From iMore, Florian Mueller is a patent expert and legal expert has written, “Apple sometimes engages in bullying, but the ITC’s attack is gratuitous, disingenuous and irresponsible,” noting the ITC’s own record shows that Apple created the disputed pulse oxymetry technology independently and that Masimo “tactically designed the patents-in-suit after Apple’s independent innovation, and more than 10 years after the original applications, in order to read on the relevant Apple Watch feature.”I think Masimo should get 'rewarded' for the trouble they have caused themselves and their shareholders LOL. They have spent 100 million on this and they only make 120 million a year in profit!
I’m in the medical field. Masimo is high quality (if still overpriced) equipment. We have a couple of generic finger pulse-oximeters that are $15 each on Amazon. We recently got a similar one from Masimo that was well over $300 for the same functionality.The difference? Masimo is sold as a medical device where the generic one is not. They are both accurate, but in the hospital, we are required to use the medically certified ones.
The Masimo one is very well made with high-quality materials, but I would rather replace the $15 unit a couple times that pay more than 20 times that cost for the “nice” one.
Is the Apple Watch pulse-oximeter “junk”? Surely you know that, just like our $15 pulse ox, the oximeter in the Apple Watch is NOT certified as a medical device, right? By your logic, that makes it worthless garbage.If you were an expert in pulse-oximetry devices, you would know that within the huge non-certified branch of devices, there is a many tiers of quality, but these generally cannot demand the exorbitant prices of the certified devices.
Perhaps I’m mistaken, but your post reads like the rant of a Karen that was hunting for a reason to be offended. Unfortunately, this Karen made a few presumptions that they thought sounded logical and ran with it, and got it all wrong.
I’m (deeply) in the medical field so yes, I know that. -
Apple's stripping out blood oxygen sensing from Apple Watch enough to skirt import ban
teejay2012 said:tech_traveller said:I am glad. Whether you like or dislike Apple, medical devices should have some exception to other product categories.
That being said, I hope Masimo gets reimbursed for their troubles.Masimo has become a bit of a troll and it seems the ITC has over reached on their decision.From iMore, Florian Mueller is a patent expert and legal expert has written, “Apple sometimes engages in bullying, but the ITC’s attack is gratuitous, disingenuous and irresponsible,” noting the ITC’s own record shows that Apple created the disputed pulse oxymetry technology independently and that Masimo “tactically designed the patents-in-suit after Apple’s independent innovation, and more than 10 years after the original applications, in order to read on the relevant Apple Watch feature.”I think Masimo should get 'rewarded' for the trouble they have caused themselves and their shareholders LOL. They have spent 100 million on this and they only make 120 million a year in profit!
I’m in the medical field. Masimo is high quality (if still overpriced) equipment. We have a couple of generic finger pulse-oximeters that are $15 each on Amazon. We recently got a similar one from Masimo that was well over $300 for the same functionality.The difference? Masimo is sold as a medical device where the generic one is not. They are both accurate, but in the hospital, we are required to use the medically certified ones.
The Masimo one is very well made with high-quality materials, but I would rather replace the $15 unit a couple times that pay more than 20 times that cost for the “nice” one. -
Apple Vision Pro has 16GB of memory, potentially 1TB of storage
Personally, I would like to be able to see what hardware is compatible, and what big 3rd party software will be released.
Can I use a flight yoke and other controls to play X-Plane for an experience beyond my wildest imagination? And that’s not even thinking outside the box!
There are so many possibilities with Apple Vision! -
Controversial Humane Ai Pin is here, costs $700, and requires a subscription
StrangeDays said:His passcode was 2001 — the film known for its murderous AI. lol -
Controversial Humane Ai Pin is here, costs $700, and requires a subscription
comcastsucks said:"Any time the microphone or camera is in use, a "trust light" is turned on for people to see"
How long until someone figures out how to turn that off?
:-/