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Nickel and copper are bull stand-outs in base metals poll – SPONSOR Tartisan #Nickel $TN.ca – $ROX.ca $FF.ca $EDG.ca $AGL.ca $ANZ.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 3:00 PM on Thursday, January 30th, 2020

SPONSOR: Tartisan Nickel (TN:CSE)  Kenbridge Property has a measured and indicated resource of 7.14 million tonnes at 0.62% nickel, 0.33% copper. Tartisan also has interests in Peru, including a 20 percent equity stake in Eloro Resources and 2 percent NSR in their La Victoria property. Click her for more information

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Nickel and copper are bull stand-outs in base metals poll: Andy Home

  • Nickel and copper are the bull stand-outs in the latest Reuters poll of base metals analysts, with both set to rise in price over the next two years thanks to supply constraints and expected market deficits.

By: Andy Home

LONDON — Nickel and copper are the bull stand-outs in the latest Reuters poll of base metals analysts, with both set to rise in price over the next two years thanks to supply constraints and expected market deficits.

All the other base metals are expected to fall in price this year at least, with zinc and lead set to underperform over the next two years as those markets transition from supply shortfall to surplus.

Supply is the clear differentiator in the poll findings.

Demand is widely expected to recover from the synchronized weakness of 2019.

Or at least it was.

The poll was conducted between Jan. 8 and Jan. 20 before the outbreak of the coronavirus in China’s Wuhan started hitting the headlines. It’s still too early for analysts to change their forecasts but quite evidently the hit to Chinese economic activity now looms ever larger.

BUYING INTO DEFICIT STORIES

Nickel was the best-performing base metal last year and analysts are looking for more of the same over the next two years.

The median forecast for cash nickel is $15,325 per tonne this year and $16,500 in 2021, up 10% and 19% respectively on last year’s average price of $13,903.

The bull consensus is almost unanimous with only JP Morgan expecting lower average prices in both years and then only by a small margin.

Underpinning the positive price outlook is Indonesia’s ban on exports of nickel ore, which kicked in at the start of this month and which is widely expected to feed through to lower nickel pig iron production in China.

There are multiple moving parts to this Indonesian puzzle but there is a clear analysts’ consensus that the nickel market will experience a supply shortfall to the tune of 31,000 tonnes in 2020 and 74,000 tonnes in 2021.

Out of the eight analysts prepared to forecast a nickel market balance only one, the Economist Intelligence Unit, foresees anything other than a deficit market in both years.

Expected supply deficit is also why copper gets the collective thumbs-up.

The median expectation is for a supply shortfall of 160,000 tonnes in 2020 and 17,000 tonnes in 2021 and, as with nickel, there are only a handful of contrarians. Just three out of 13 analysts expect a surplus this year.

The copper price is expected to rise by around 3% per year from 2019 levels to $6,214 this year and $6,393 next year.

ZINC THE UNDERPERFORMER

Among the other base metals, zinc is the least favored while aluminum and tin lie somewhere in the middle of the bull-bear spectrum with analysts forecasting lower prices this year with some recovery penciled in for 2021.

The poll’s median forecast for zinc is a fall from an average $2,549 in 2019 to $2,295 this year and $2,299 in 2021.

That’s predicated on an expected 108,000-tonne supply surplus this year and a bigger 185,000-tonne excess in 2021. Only one company, Jefferies, is looking for a deficit in both years to the tune of a relatively modest 26,000 tonnes and 21,000 tonnes respectively.

Tangible signs that zinc has transitioned from a state of supply deficit to surplus were conspicuous by their absence last year. Analysts are evidently expecting that to change going forwards.

Unsurprisingly, the collective bearishness on zinc extends to sister metal lead because of the two metals’ shared mined production profile.

Lead is not expected to fall by nearly as much as zinc but that may be down to the market’s opacity as much as anything else. Only 15 analysts hazarded a price forecast for lead, compared with 23 for zinc, and only four projected a market balance estimate compared with zinc’s eight.

Opacity also continues to plague assessments of the aluminum market. Analysts’ views of market balance this year range from a surplus of 1.1 million tonnes (Morgan Stanley) to a deficit of 1.1 million (Bank of America Merrill Lynch).

The median reading is a surplus of 350,000 tonnes, translating into a median price forecast of $1,775, down 1% on 2019. Only a slight pick-up to $1,830 is expected next year, reflecting market concerns that Chinese production is set to resume its strong uptrend after pausing in 2019.

The tiny tin market was out of favor last year and looks set to remain so again this year with a median forecast the price will drop 6% to $17,500, from last year’s $18,660. A modest bounce is expected next year but only to $18,175.

DEMAND SHOCK

This poll is already starting to look like a rear-view snapshot of the world before the coronavirus.

Analysts’ focus on supply differentiators was in part based on a collective assumption that industrial metals demand was going to improve this year after last year’s weak performance.

That benign view in turn assumed a recovery in China’s giant manufacturing sector, still the most single powerful driver of metals prices.

The spread of the coronavirus and Beijing’s increasingly draconian measures to contain it are already undermining those assumptions.

It’s still too early for analysts to change their price forecasts and the consensus is that any Chinese manufacturing recovery is postponed not canceled.

If the SARS virus of 2003 is a template, itself questionable, the prognosis is for a sharp short-term hit to Chinese economic growth followed by an equally sharp bounce as Beijing pulls all the usual stimulus levers to compensate.

Expectations are changing in real time in tandem with the news flow coming out of China.

However, it’s noticeable that the two base metals hardest hit so far are nickel and copper, down by 12% and 9% respectively since the start of January.

That’s because funds had been long of both, buying into the same optimistic narrative evident in the analysts poll. Those positions are now being rapidly unwound as investors reassess their views.

It’s a sign that demand not supply may yet exert the more powerful effect on pricing this year.

In which case 2020 could end up a lot like 2019.

Source: https://business.financialpost.com/pmn/business-pmn/nickel-and-copper-are-bull-stand-outs-in-base-metals-poll-andy-home

Google Announces $1 Million Grant to Help Fight Fake News SPONSOR: Datametrex AI Limited $DM.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 2:00 PM on Thursday, January 30th, 2020

SPONSOR: Datametrex AI Limited (TSX-V: DM) A revenue generating small cap A.I. company that NATO and Canadian Defence are using to fight fake news & social media threats. The company announced three $1M contacts in Q3-2019. Click here for more info.

Google Announces $1 Million Grant to Help Fight Fake News in India

  • Technology giant Google on Wednesday, 29 January, announced a USD 1 million grant to promote news literacy among Indians.

The money will be given to Internews, a global non-profit, which will select a team of 250 journalists, fact checkers, academics and NGO workers for the project, a statement said.

The announcement, part of a USD 10 million commitment worldwide to media literacy, comes at a time when news publishers, especially on the digital front, have been found to have indulged in spreading misinformation.

Google said a curriculum will be developed by a team of global and local experts, who will roll out the project in seven Indian languages.

“The local leaders will then roll out the training to new internet users in non-metro cities in India, enabling them to better navigate the internet and assess the information they find,” the statement said.

With an eye to curb misinformation, Google News Initiative (GNI) India Training Network — a group of 240 senior Indian reporters and journalism educators — has been working to counteract disinformation in their newsrooms and beyond since last year.

GNI has given verification training for more than 15,000 journalists and students from more than 875 news organisations in 10 Indian languages, using a “train-the-trainer” approach over the past year, it said.

Source: https://www.thequint.com/news/webqoof/google-announces-dollar1-million-grant-to-help-fight-fake-news-in-india

#Edtech startup WizKlub raises nearly $1m in seed funding SPONSOR: BetterU Education Corp. $BTRU.ca $ARCL $CPLA $BPI $FC.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 1:00 PM on Thursday, January 30th, 2020
SPONSOR:  BetterU Education Corp. aims to provide access to quality education from around the world. The company plans to bridge the prevailing gap in the education and job industry and enhance the lives of its prospective learners by developing an integrated ecosystem. Click here for more information.

Edtech startup WizKlub raises nearly $1m in seed funding

  • Bengaluru-based edtech startup WizKlub has raised 70 million rupees (US$980,000) in a seed round led by seed and pre-seed stage VC firm Incubate Fund India.

By: Miguel Cordon

WizKlub founder and CEO Amit Bansal / Photo credit: WizKlub

The investment round, which also included participation from Insitor Impact Asia Fund, brings the startup’s total capital raised to 120 million rupees (US$1.7 million) so far, according to a statement.

WizKlub was established in 2018 by Amit Bansal, together with a leadership team with extensive experience in education. The startup’s programs help children aged five to 15 develop cognitive skills through an AI platform that delivers personalized learning experiences.

Its higher-order thinking skills (HOTS) program makes sure that every child is a smart reader and a smart problem solver. Its SmartTech course, on the other hand, helps children develop lifelong skills in tech through the application of coding, robotics, smart devices, and AI. AD. Remove this ad space by subscribing. Support independent journalism.

With the investment, WizKlub plans to further enhance its products and expand to other markets.

“Technology is transforming the world at an unprecedented pace, which necessitates children of this generation to be lifelong learners and adept problem solvers,” said Bansal. “Our HOTS and SmartTech programs are designed for maximum impact in these areas.”

To date, the startup has over 150 centers in Bengaluru, where it helped more than 3,000 children through its programs. The programs, which are offered on a subscription basis, are on track to onboard over 10,000 learners over the next few months, the startup said.

WizKlub’s fundraise is the latest in a string of investments in India-based edtech firms. Earlier this week, Bengaluru-based InterviewBit, which offers computer science courses through live online classes, raised US$20 million in a series A round led by Sequoia India and Tiger Global.

Think and Learn, the owner and operator of leading learning app Byju’s, also raked in US$200 million from Tiger Global this month, valuing the company at about US$8 billion.

Source: https://www.techinasia.com/wizklub-raises-1m-seed-funding

Empower Clinics $CBDT.ca – Next Decade in #Cannabis Education: Where Do We Go From Here? $WEED.ca $CGC $ACB $APH $CRON.ca $HEXO.ca $OGI.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 12:27 PM on Thursday, January 30th, 2020

SPONSOR:

Why Empower Clinics

  • A leading owner/operator of physician staffed health and pain management clinics.
  • Patient database of over 165,000 patients 
  • Platform generating $1.4M USD (9 months ending Sept. 30, 2019)
  • Proprietary technology platforms including Electronic Health Records portal and e-Commerce for CBD product distribution
  • Recently launched CBD extraction facility
  • First extraction system capacity = 6,000 Kg per year.
  • CBD based products are poised to be a $20B global industry by 2022
  • Medical cannabis is poised to be a $100B global industry by 2025

Next Decade in Cannabis Education: Where Do We Go From Here?

Cannabis education has seen remarkable momentum over the past 10 years.

In 2010, only a handful of U.S. states had medical cannabis programs. No adult-use legislation was passed anywhere in the country (or the world). Mainstream images of cannabis were mostly outdated stoner stereotypes in movies and television.

Much of America still viewed cannabis from a place of fear—a plant to be demonized, avoided and eradicated.

In 2011, the tide turned for cannabis. Support for cannabis legalization in the U.S. reached 50% for the first time in recorded history. This upward trend continues to this day; Americans are increasingly becoming more open-minded about cannabis being good for society.

Today, medical cannabis is legal in 33 states and 11 states have legalized for adult use (plus Washington D.C. has legal medical and adult use). What an incredible shift in just 10 short years!

Other countries—Canada, Georgia, South Africa and Uruguay—have outright lifted cannabis prohibition. Chile, Colombia, Poland, Thailand, Italy, Greece, Germany, Norway and many others now have medical cannabis laws. The U.S. is waking up to the power and benefits of cannabis, and it’s becoming a global revolution.

How Cannabis Education Got Us Here

The focus in cannabis education over the past 10 years has been split between two-prongs—consumer-facing and legislative-facing.

Steve DeAngelo, the family of Charlotte Figi and many other advocates in the space have exponentially educated the public about the medical and wellness benefits of cannabis. Cannabis advocates demonstrate that the plant is safe, with distinctive life-enhancing and life-saving properties.

The mission behind these advocates is to share stories and provide credible information on the plant’s safety profile, as well as health, happiness and wellness benefits. This led to the U.S. going from barely 50% approval for legalization in 2011 to a 66% approval rating in 2018.

Legislation-facing cannabis education has primarily been about changing medical cannabis laws. This way, Americans can access tested medical cannabis that is safe, and businesses can operate legally.

It’s only been in the last few years that adult use has started to gain steam. This side of cannabis education involves helping the government understand medical benefits, economic benefits, social benefits, tax benefits and job-boosting properties of cannabis.

How do we help spread this understanding? By sharing the latest data. The cannabis industry is generating U.S. employment—including ancillary sectors—supporting more than 500,000 jobs in 2019. And when it comes to taxes, the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy estimated state and local cannabis tax revenue in the US to be $1.6 billion for 2019.

Other benefits of legal cannabis catching the eye of legislators include revitalization, improved security and lighting of once-abandoned areas now home to cannabis companies. Townships and counties are also reporting a reduction in violent crime and an increase of residential property values in areas where cannabis dispensaries are located.

New regulations also free law enforcement and judicial resources to focus on serious crimes, rather than going after cannabis businesses, patients and consumers.

However, as this new, rapidly emerging industry begins to find its feet, the biggest challenges and growing pains in cannabis are becoming more evident with every passing week.

This is where the next phase of cannabis education comes into play.

Cannabis Education in 2020 and Beyond

In this new decade, cannabis education is taking on an evolved focus. With cannabis touching many different sectors of society because of legalization, it’s now time to educate the specialists.

Ten years from now, we’ll be talking about how doctors have integrated cannabis into healing protocols, how pharmacists are properly prescribing cannabis and how health insurance is covering cannabis medicine under policies.

We’ll be talking about how retail establishments around the world are carrying cannabis and CBD products to build businesses and bring safe, legal access to consumers and patients across the globe.

We will see law enforcement adopting an entirely new framework for enforcing cannabis policy, one that respects people’s rights and doesn’t treat innocent bystanders as criminals.

This is where cannabis is heading, and to get there, we need specialized education that brings specialized knowledge to all individual groups from health care professionals to law enforcement officials and beyond.

Training a New Workforce

There are brand new, fast-growing cannabis industries to support.

The range and number of careers in cannabis today is greater than most Americans realize. Earlier you read that there’s 500,000+ jobs in and around cannabis—that’s a 76% increase from cannabis jobs in 2018.

This is a fast-growing job market in which people need to be trained in ALL areas of cannabis that require specialized knowledge to operate, including:

  • Business
  • Banking & Finance
  • Agriculture & Cultivation
  • Distribution
  • Legal & Compliance
  • Medical
  • Manufacturing & Product Development
  • Marketing & PR
  • Retail
  • Sales
  • Science & Extraction
  • Tech
  • Much more.

Colleges, universities and schools will need to get more involved in cannabis to help train and educate an entirely new workforce. Collaborating with higher ed will be a huge sector of development for cannabis education in this decade.

Ten years from now, we’ll no doubt see with a sense of surprise how much progress has been made in cannabis. The industry will become a boring, everyday topic, fully legitimized and integrated across the globe. Cannabis will improve quality of life for countless Americans, fueling the careers of millions—and we’ll be wondering: what took us so long?

Max Simon is the founder and CEO of Green Flower, the global leader in cannabis education and training.

Source: https://observer.com/2020/01/cannabis-education-next-decade/

Electric Vehicle #EV #Batteries Will ‘Dwarf’ The Grid’s Energy-Storage Needs SPONSOR: $HPQ.ca Silicon $FSLR $SPWR $CSIQ $PYR.ca $XMG.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 3:44 PM on Wednesday, January 29th, 2020

SPONSOR: HPQ-Silicon Resources HPQ: TSX-V aiming to become the lowest cost producer of Silicon Metal and a vertically integrated and diversified High Purity, Solar Grade Silicon Metal producer. Click here for more info.

Electric Vehicle Batteries Will ‘Dwarf’ The Grid’s Energy-Storage Needs

By: Jeff McMahon

  • There will be more than enough batteries in electric vehicles by 2050 to support a grid that runs on solar and wind—if the two are connected by smart chargers, according to experts at the International Renewable Energy Agency.

Electric vehicles are expected to carry 40 terawatt-hours of battery storage by that date, said Francisco Boshell, IRENA’s team lead for renewable energy technology standards and markets, compared to nine terawatts of stationary storage.

“If we see this from not from a transport perspective but from a power-sector perspective it also means that a massive electricity storage capacity would be available with all these batteries on wheels,” Boshell said in webinar posted by IRENA this week. “Batteries in EVs dwarf a stationary battery capacity in 2050…. This is indeed a great opportunity for the power sector transformation.

If those EV batteries are connected to the grid by smart chargers, they could not only provide sufficient power but also many of the system services needed by a grid that relies on intermittent renewables.

Those services include primary and secondary power reserves, fast-frequency reserves, arbitrage, voltage control, and congestion management through load shifting and peak shaving, said Arina Anisie, who collaborated with Boshell and other analysts on an IRENA report on the topic.

“Vehicle-to-grid makes a lot of sense in the sense that the cars are parked 90 percent of the time, and the battery is connected to the grid for such a long time that we can actually use the battery to offer some services back to the grid and help the grid increase flexibility and integrate a higher share of wind and solar,” said Anisie, an officer in IRENA’s renewable energy innovation team.

“So it would be a win-win situation for both the transport sector and the power sector.”

There are seeming incompatibilities between the two systems, Anisie said, but they are resolvable.

For example, drivers will prefer fast or ultra-fast chargers to minimize charging time, but a smart charging system works best with slow chargers.

“It really needs to change the behavior of the consumer to be able to harness the synergies between mobility and wind and solar,” she said, though there are technical ways to resolve the issue too, including battery swapping or buffer storage at charging stations.

“There are several options to actually to still install fast charging that is much needed, especially on the highways, but to mitigate the stress that it puts on the local grid.”

There are other driver-based obstacles, such as concerns about range anxiety and battery health in a vehicle that exchanges power with the grid.

But not integrating the two sectors could be more costly and problematic than integrating them.

A study of Hamburg’s grid by the engineering firm Stromnetz found that if 97 percent of the city’s vehicles were electric, the grid would experience congestion at 15 percent of its feeders.

Upgrading the grid to fix that problem would cost €20 million. But a grid operator with access to a smart charging system could resolve the congestion for only €2 million.

“It reduces congestion at a much lower cost than investing in the grid solution,” Anisie said.

Vehicle autonomy may present another challenge, Anisie said. The prospect of shared autonomous vehicles means far fewer vehicles would be needed overall, and each would be connected to the grid for less time, which could deprive the grid of this vast mobile battery.

Ainsie recommended public officials study these potential changes in the nature of mobility but meanwhile incentivize smart charging and promote electric vehicles and renewables together.

“Both should go hand in hand.”

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffmcmahon/2020/01/29/electric-vehicle-batteries-could-dwarf-the-grids-energy-storage-needs/#40dffdd75929

#Panasonic Enters #Edtech Market With #CareerEx, Xcelit Apps For College, School Students SPONSOR: BetterU Education Corp. $BTRU.ca $ARCL $CPLA $BPI $FC.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 2:15 PM on Wednesday, January 29th, 2020
SPONSOR:  BetterU Education Corp. aims to provide access to quality education from around the world. The company plans to bridge the prevailing gap in the education and job industry and enhance the lives of its prospective learners by developing an integrated ecosystem. Click here for more information.

Panasonic Enters Edtech Market With CareerEx, Xcelit Apps For College, School Students

  • Panasonic has launched two edtech platforms — CareerEx and XcellT
  • It will offer courses in technologies such as data science, cloud computing and more
  • India Skills Report 2019 found that 50% of the job applicants in India either have very basic or no required skills for the job

Yatti Soni

Looks like edtech is slowly becoming a lucrative sector, even for consumer tech giants. The Indian arm of Japanese multinational Panasonic has launched CareerEx and Xcelit to enter the Indian edtech market. Both products are aimed at solving the skill development gap in India’s deeptech sector. 

While CareerEx is designed to help college and university students get training in emerging technologies such as data science, cloud computing, machine learning, artificial intelligence and internet of things (IoT), Xcelit is focused on school students from Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities. The products are said to also help schoolgoers in their preparation for competitive exams. 

CareerEx courses are priced at the starting cost of INR 9999 per month, while Xcelit courses start from INR 999 per month. The products will also offer individual tests for INR 99. Both apps are available on Android and iOS devices.
Students on both apps can get a chance to work on Panasonic projects and internships. The company has collaborated with various educational institutions to develop courses in CareerEx and Xcelit. These products have been developed for students, colleges, and universities, to bridge the existing skill development gap between the education system and the employment needs of the industry in the future, Panasonic said.

According to Atsushi Motoya, head of Panasonic India Innovation Centre, the Japanese electronics major is looking to impacting over 100K students with these edtech products in the next five years. 

Skill Gap In Indian Market

The India Skills Report 2019 found that about 50% of the job applicants in India either have very basic or no required skills for the job, which highlights the need to train individuals in the skills, techniques and technology that businesses are actually using today. Other startups in this skilling space include Pesto, upGrad, Udacity, UnAcademy and others that offer professionals and students online upskilling and reskilling courses.

According to World Economic Forum, over half of the workers in India will need reskilling by 2022, to meet the future talent demands. Also according to a Datalabs by Inc42 study, the scarcity of high skilled labour in India was one of the biggest hindrances in the business growth of deeptech startups operating in India. 

Narendra Modi government had launched the Skill India initiative in 2015. The programme aimed to train more than 400 Mn people in different skills by 2022. However till June 2018, only 40 Mn people were trained, wherein 25 Mn people were trained under the skill development and entrepreneurship ministry.

Source: https://inc42.com/buzz/panasonic-enters-india-edtech-market-with-careerex-xcelit-apps-for-college-school-students/

How #Mhealth apps are providing solutions to the healthcare market’s problems – SPONSOR: CardioComm Solutions $EKG.ca – $ATE.ca $TLT.ca $OGI.ca $ACST.ca $IPA.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 2:00 PM on Wednesday, January 29th, 2020

SPONSOR: CardioComm Solutions (EKG: TSX-V) – The heartbeat of cardiovascular medicine and telemedicine. Patented systems enable medical professionals, patients, and other healthcare professionals, clinics, hospitals and call centres to access and manage patient information in a secure and reliable environment.

How mHealth apps are providing solutions to the healthcare market’s problems

  • Mobile health is the monitoring and sharing of health information via mobile technology – such as wearables and health tracking apps
  • The use of mobile devices and wireless technology to monitor symptoms and deliver care allows physicians to make diagnoses quicker and with fewer errors

By: Alicia Phaneuf

Today’s consumers don’t want to solely rely on yearly physicals or scattered drop-in appointments to monitor their health – they are seeking more individualized control over the way healthcare is accessed so that they can analyze personal health data and talk to healthcare professionals at all times.

By embracing mobile health, or mHealth, patients are able to keep track of their own health data in real time and inform healthcare providers of any abnormalities at the push of a button.  

What is mHealth (mobile health)?

Mobile health is the monitoring and sharing of health information via mobile technology – such as wearables and health tracking apps. The use of mobile devices and wireless technology to monitor symptoms and deliver care allows physicians to make diagnoses quicker and with fewer errors. 

And as tech giants like Apple and Google continue pushing their way into healthcare, mHealth will likely grow in popularity.

mHealth vs telehealth

Telehealth uses technology to extend the reach of healthcare professionals beyond traditional clinical settings. It’s a broad term describing how the healthcare market is taking advantage of digital development to enable remote care. Samsung Health is a platform where individuals can view activity trends, health insights and access telehealth services. Steve Kovach/Business Insider

Comparatively, mHealth is a subset of telehealth, referring specifically to the use of mobile technology to inform and educate consumers on healthcare. It uses mobile devices to monitor patients’ exercise, heart rate, and medication adherence.

Examples of different types of mHealth apps

Mobile health is gaining steam among consumers as Apple and Google continue to offer an array of mHealth applications on their app stores; there were more than 318,000 mHealth apps available for download worldwide as of November 2017. Some of the most common categories of mHealth apps include: 

  • Diabetes 
  • Pregnancy 
  • Weight loss 
  • Chronic illness 

Top mHealth apps on the market

With increasing consumer demand to monitor their own health comes the opportunity for healthcare companies and tech giants to develop mHealth applications. Here are some of the top mobile health apps on the market: AliveCor’s KardiaMobile allows users to take an EKG and have data stored directly onto their smartphone. Alivecor

  • Fitbit
  • Apple Heart Study
  • GoogleFit
  • Samsung Health 
  • AliveCor’s KardiaMobile
  • BlueStar

Benefits of mHealth app solutions

Stakeholders across the healthcare industry are looking to tap into the mHealth opportunity as Mobile health applications are beginning to integrate electronic health records (EHRs) and other wearable tech devices

According to Business Insider Intelligence, nearly half of all mHealth app publishers integrate with EHRs in order to provide a detailed representation of a patient’s health or medical history. Stakeholders across the healthcare industry are looking to tap into the mHealth opportunity. Business Insider Intelligence

Healthcare providers could reduce appointment costs by taking advantage of mHealth applications – which lowers the risk of patient rehabilitation. Instead of staying in a healthcare facility post surgical discharge, patients could utilize mHealth apps for recovery instructions and medication reminders. 

Payers – which handle the financial aspects of healthcare – can also capitalize on mHealth cost benefits. According to a 2018 Leavitt Partners report, clinical care only accounts for 20% of health, and social determinants account for the remainder. 

Health insurance providers could develop mobile apps that provide consumers with health education and send reminders to purchase healthy food – keeping patients largely responsible for their own healthcare.

mHealth industry trends & technologies

One concern consumers have regarding mHealth solutions has to do with data-sharing practices among multiple technologies and applications. According to Business Insider Intelligence, 79% of 24 top-rated mHealth apps shared user data with 55 entities, like app developers and third parties. 

Despite privacy concerns however, Business Insider Intelligence predicts that as big tech companies like Apple and Samsung continue to generate their own health features in smartphones, the adoption of mHealth apps will continue to grow.

In fact, Apple grew wearable revenue 42% year-over-year in 2018 and has the potential to hit $15 billion in healthcare-related revenue by 2021. 

Source: https://www.businessinsider.com/mhealth-apps-definition-examples

Disinformation in 5.4 Billion Fake Accounts: A Lesson for the Private Sector SPONSOR: Datametrex AI Limited $DM.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 1:30 PM on Wednesday, January 29th, 2020

SPONSOR: Datametrex AI Limited (TSX-V: DM) A revenue generating small cap A.I. company that NATO and Canadian Defence are using to fight fake news & social media threats. The company announced three $1M contacts in Q3-2019. Click here for more info.

Disinformation in 5.4 Billion Fake Accounts: A Lesson for the Private Sector

  • Social media platforms are turning a new leaf to make online communities safer and happier places. Instagram turned off “likes,” but the biggest news came when Facebook shut down 5.4 billion fake accounts.

By: John Briar

Social media platforms are turning a new leaf to make online communities safer and happier places. Instagram turned off “likes,” but the biggest news came when Facebook shut down 5.4 billion fake accounts. The company reported that up to five percent of its monthly user base of nearly 2.5 billion consisted of fake accounts. They also noted that while the numbers are high, that doesn’t mean there is an equal amount of harmful information. They are just getting better at identifying the accounts.

The concerted effort to close fictitious accounts is shedding light on disinformation and misinformation campaigns. But it’s not a new tactic. It dates back to the early days of war when false content was spread with the intent to deceive, mislead, or manipulate a target or opponent. Where disinformation was once communicated by telegram, the modern version of vast, coordinated campaigns are now disseminated through social media with bots, Twitterbots and bot farms—at a scale humans could never perform.

Now, disinformation campaigns can be lodged by a government to influence stock prices in another country, or by a private company to degrade brand presence and consumer confidence. What’s worse is that bots can facilitate these campaigns en masse.

Understanding the Role Bots Play in Disinformation

On social media, you might be able to easily identify bots trolling users. Or maybe not—it’s often trickier than you’d expect. Sophisticated bots use several tactics that make them successful at disinformation and appearing human, including:

  1. Speed and Amplification – Bots quickly spread low-credibility content to increase the likelihood information goes viral. The more humans see the disinformation campaigns, the more likely they are to spread it themselves.
  2. Exploiting Human-Generated Content – Bots spread negative or polarizing content generated from real humans that prove to be credible to other humans.
  3. Using Metadata – Bots used more metadata (comments, photo captions, etc.) to appear as human, which helps evade detection.

Whether fraudsters create false information or use existing misinformation, bots are the unstoppable force in the spread of disinformation. Even with platforms like Facebook dismantling campaigns, taking down bots is a pervasive game of whack-a-mole.

Business Interference: A Bot’s Expertise

How do we take the lessons learned and apply them to today’s businesses? For one thing, we know that identifying bots masquerading as customers, competitors, or the actual company is increasingly difficult.

Some attempts to deceive, mislead and manipulate customers use the same bot-driven propaganda techniques as we have seen on social media platforms. Bots can amplify and create negative reviews, spread misinformation about unrest in a company, or defame company leadership.

Beyond that, one of the biggest threats to businesses is content scraping. In this attack vector, bots are programmed to crawl and fetch any information that could be used “as is” or injected with misinformation before spreading. This could include prices, promotions, API data, articles, research and other pertinent information. Because of the open nature of the Internet, nothing is stopping bots from gaining access to websites and applications, unless bot detection and mitigation is in place.

Aside from what we have seen, what do company-targeted disinformation campaigns look like in the wild?

  • Legitimate pricing sheets could be scraped by a bot, then distorted to become favorable to the competition before presenting to prospects.
  • Articles are stolen, injected with misinformation and copied around the Internet—hurting businesses twofold—search engines assuming the company is trying to game SEO and lowering the ranking, and misleading content consumers.

Given that bots account for nearly half of web traffic, standard cybersecurity technologies that do not specialize in bots cannot prevent the onslaught of fraudulent traffic. If information reserved for customers and partners exists on company websites, even behind a portal, companies should expect bots to continue scraping their sites until they leave with valuable content. From all the data that has been studied, bad bots come early – days after a site is launched. They attack in waves, consistently trying and retrying to capture critical information.

The Future of Bots in 2020

If the headlines teach us anything, we can predict that 2020 will bring even more sophisticated bots in full force, leveraging artificial intelligence (AI) and getting smarter about how to behave like a human. To outpace fraudsters and their bot armies, the same advanced technologies like AI and machine learning along with behavioral analytics are required. Only then will it be possible to parse out traffic and allow humans through, while stopping bots before they can gather information for disinformation campaigns.

Source: https://www.securitymagazine.com/articles/91616-disinformation-in-54-billion-fake-accounts-a-lesson-for-the-private-sector

Tartisan #Nickel $TN.ca – Understanding Nickel Usage in Lithium Batteries $ROX.ca $FF.ca $EDG.ca $AGL.ca $ANZ.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 12:34 PM on Wednesday, January 29th, 2020

SPONSOR: Tartisan Nickel (TN:CSE)  Kenbridge Property has a measured and indicated resource of 7.14 million tonnes at 0.62% nickel, 0.33% copper. Tartisan also has interests in Peru, including a 20 percent equity stake in Eloro Resources and 2 percent NSR in their La Victoria property. Click her for more information

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Understanding Nickel Usage in Lithium Batteries

  • CRU calculates that around 5% of nickel demand came from the battery sector in 2019
  • However, we forecast that growth will be rapid and the battery sectors use of primary nickel will reach 870,000 tonnes by 2030 and 1.5 Mt by 2040

LONDON, Jan. 29, 2020 — This Insight focuses on current nickel use in the battery sector, how it has changed in recent years, what is driving these changes and what our base case demand forecasts for nickel are.

Understanding nickel usage in lithium batteries (PRNewsfoto/CRU)

CRU calculates that around 5% of nickel demand came from the battery sector in 2019. However, we forecast that growth will be rapid and the battery sectors use of primary nickel will reach 870,000 tonnes by 2030 and 1.5 Mt by 2040. The evolution of the electric vehicle sector and the differing battery technologies within it, will increasingly shape the nickel market and represent a third of total demand by 2040.

There has been fierce debate surrounding the outlook for nickel usage in lithium batteries over the past few years. CRU has invested a large amount of time and resources into developing in-house long-term modelling capabilities for the automotive sector. This work has been undertaken not only to support our analysis of traditional automotive commodities like steel and aluminium, but also to shed light on the development and growth of the nascent electric vehicle (EV) sector and to better understand the resultant long-term impact for a wide range of commodities including cobalt, lithium, nickel, graphite and PGMs.

Of the various battery chemistries in widespread production four use nickel: nickel metal hydride (NiMH), nickel cadmium (NiCd), nickel-manganese-cobalt (NMC) and nickel-cobalt-aluminium oxide (NCA). Here, we will focus on NMC and NCA, which amount to more than 95% of nickel contained in batteries. NMC and NCA are lithium-ion batteries (LIBs), but NiMH and NiCd are not and we believe more applications will move towards using LIBs in the future.

Sourcing of nickel units for cathode markets shows high degree of flexibility

CRU’s in-house nickel sulphate supply model covers nine separate key processing routes. These can be classified into four categories, based on the raw materials used; sulphide ore, nickel briquettes, laterite ore and recycled nickel. Currently, sulphide ore, nickel briquettes are the dominate routes, but laterite ore and recycled nickel are growing.

Read the full story:

https://www.crugroup.com/knowledge-and-insights/insights/2020/understanding-nickel-usage-in-lithium-batteries/

NORTHBUD $NBUD.ca – Canada’s #Marijuana Sales Top $100 Million in a Month for the First Time $CGC $ACB $APH $CRON.ca $OGI.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 5:40 PM on Tuesday, January 28th, 2020

SPONSOR: NORTHBUD (NBUD:CSE) Sustainable low cost, high quality cannabinoid production and procurement focusing on both bio-pharmaceutical development and Cannabinoid Infused Products. Learn More.

  • Aside from the fact that cannabis sales hit a new all-time high in November — something not unexpected given that the Canadian pot industry is still ramping up — what really stood out is that monthly sales finally eclipsed $100 million (that’s U.S. dollars). 

By: Sean Williams

It’s pretty incredible what a difference a year can make.

At this time last year, cannabis stocks were flying high, and the expectation had been that most brand-name companies would push toward recurring profitability by the end of the year. Of course, hindsight being what it is, we know this didn’t happen. High tax rates in select U.S. states, persistent supply issues in Canada, and a resilient black market weighed heavily on the cannabis industry in 2019 and pushed a number of popular pot stocks to two-year lows.

However, there may be light at the end of the tunnel.

Image source: Getty Images.

Canadian weed sales just hit a monthly milestone

Late last week, Statistics Canada released its monthly retail trade sales data for November. Since the marijuana industry is tightly regulated, but nonetheless legal, licensed cannabis store data is included in this monthly report. Aside from the fact that cannabis sales hit a new all-time high in November — something not unexpected given that the Canadian pot industry is still ramping up — what really stood out is that monthly sales finally eclipsed $100 million (that’s U.S. dollars). 

Here’s a snapshot of how licensed cannabis store sales have progressed since adult-use weed hit dispensary shelves on Oct. 17, 2018 (data is reported in Canadian dollars (CA$), with parenthesis featuring U.S. dollar equivalency).

  • October (2018): CA$53.68 million ($40.83 million)
  • November (2018): CA$53.73 million ($40.87 million)
  • December (2018): CA$57.34 million ($43.61 million)
  • January: CA$54.88 million ($41.74 million)
  • February: CA$51.66 million ($39.29 million)
  • March: CA$60.94 million ($46.35 million)
  • April: CA$74.58 million ($56.73 million)
  • May: CA$85.81 million ($65.27 million)
  • June: CA$91.46 million ($69.56 million)
  • July: CA$107.36 million ($81.66 million)
  • August: CA$125.95 million ($95.8 million)
  • September: CA$122.93 million ($93.5 million)
  • October: CA$128.98 million ($98.1 million)
  • November: CA$135.75 million ($103.25 million)

It took more than a year, but November featured more than $103 million in sales for Canada, a market that Wall Street foresees generating $5 billion in annual sales by 2024. As a whole, the Canadian marijuana market has generated $916.6 million in revenue since sales commenced on Oct. 17, 2018. This makes it very likely that Canada surpassed $1 billion in aggregate pot sales since launch in December, but we’ll have to wait a month to confirm.

Image source: Getty Images.

Here’s why Canadian cannabis sales could make a major leap forward in 2020

The hope, among both Wall Street and investors, is that this uptick in sales is really just the tip of the iceberg. Two key changes in the cannabis market are expected to improve consumer demand and relieve a lot of the supply bottlenecks that’ve hindered pot sales to this point.

The first is the launch of high-margin derivative products, which kicked off in mid-December. Derivatives are non-dried flower products, such as vapes, edibles, infused beverages, topicals, and concentrates. Not only do derivatives offer a new means of consumption that doesn’t, necessarily, require smoking cannabis, but they’re significantly more attractive to a younger generation of users who have shown a greater willingness to try or buy these higher-margin consumption alternatives.

According to investment bank Cowen Group, half of all U.S. pot sales are expected to be generated from derivatives, with dried flower and pre-rolled cannabis making up the other 43% and 7%, respectively. If these figures translate similarly in Canada, then the launch of derivatives should begin to put some pep in grower’s step by midyear, or maybe even sooner.

The other major catalyst is the long-awaited dispensary license reform being undertaken in Ontario, the country’s largest province by population. Having previously worked with a lottery system, Ontario, home to 38% of Canada’s residents, only opened 24 cannabis retail stores as of the one-year anniversary of recreational weed sales. This created few channels for legal product to reach consumers and allowed the black market to thrive.

Moving forward, Ontario has plans to issue dispensary licenses in a more traditional fashion. Licenses should start being issued by no later than April, with the expectation of 20 (or more) stores opening each month. By year’s end, provincial regulators hopes to have around 250 open locations, representing about a 10-fold increase from where it began the year.

Image source: Getty Images.

Source: https://www.fool.com/investing/2020/01/28/canadas-marijuana-sales-top-100-million-in-a-month.aspx