AI will shape health care plans for US veterans

American veterans needing health care are about to get help from an unusual source: artificial intelligence. The Department of Veterans Affairs and Flow Health have forged a 5-year alliance that will see the two build a massive medical knowledge grap...

American alcohol use on the rise, especially for women


University of Washington's Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation discovered that American instances of binge and heavy drinking rose between 2002 and 2012. However, heavy drinking data focused...

World War Two Veterans Discuss Pearl Harbor Attacks on 73rd Anniversary


Sunday, December 7, marked the 73rd anniversary attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, and the entrance of the United States into World War II in 1941. This year, World War II veterans gathered at the site...

Defense Mobile to offer Sprint-based cellular service to soldiers and veterans

Defense Mobile to offer Sprintbased cellular service to soldiers and veterans

While the US military can devote many resources to putting smartphones on the battlefield, it can't do the same for soldiers' private lives. A new carrier, Defense Mobile, wants to fill that void: it just announced a deal to use Sprint's CDMA and LTE networks for cellular service devoted to active-duty forces, reserves and veterans. The provider will offer plans at enlisted rank budgets, ranging from $20 for the basics to $60 for a family plan. It won't skimp on the handset selection, though -- the company already promises the Galaxy S 4, HTC One and iPhone 5. Defense Mobile hopes to go live in 2014, and it should arrive with both apps and branding tailored to each military branch.

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Via: GigaOM

Source: Defense Mobile

Google launches VetNet, uses Google+ to link veterans with civilian jobs (video)

Google launches VetNet, uses Google to link veterans with civilian jobs video

As eager as Google has been to help veterans find work in the civilian world, most of its work has been parallel to what's already going on. It's hoping to use its social networking skills from Google+ as the linchpin for a larger effort. Enter VetNet: the portal aggregates job-finding resources from Hire Heroes USA, Hiring Our Heroes and the Institute for Veterans and Military Families, using Google+ pages for program tracks that cover job hunting basics, career networking and entrepreneurial courses. Former soldiers will logically need to sign in, but they'll get access to video discussions through Hangouts, a Google Calendar for events and, naturally, a place to connect with fellow vets. The VetNet hub is already live; if transitioning to work outside the armed forces feels like too much of a solitary pursuit so far, the service could be a prime opportunity.

Continue reading Google launches VetNet, uses Google+ to link veterans with civilian jobs (video)

Filed under:

Comments

Via: Google Official Blog

Source: VetNet