Apple (NSDQ:AAPL) might soon make Microsoft (NSDQ:MSFT)’s Bing the default search provider on the iPhone instead of Google (NSDQ:GOOG), according to one of the latest rumors making the rounds.
Such a rift between Apple and Google could have a big impact on both companies and on Apple iPhone users, according to a new research report.
“As huge as this is from a business relations point of view (Apple must be seriously angry with Google to consider pairing up with their longtime rival Microsoft), when you look closer at the numbers Google pulls from iPhone users, you begin to realize just how much this could affect the big G,” wrote Daniel Ruby, online insights research director for Chitika, in the report.
Need to assist someone in labor with a baby that’s about to breach in a crowded tent city in the devastated city of Port-Au-Prince, Haiti? Well, there’s not an app for that, but an iPhone can help.
That’s how family physician Ranit Mishori, left, of the Georgetown University Medical Center counseled ABC News medical editor Richard Besser and others when they came upon a woman who was in labor, not knowing whether there was a medical facility nearby.
The Medical Center Office of Communications said that Mishori first heard about their situation through an e-mail:
“Rich Besser has come upon a situation in the tent city in Haiti where he is needed to help deliver a baby,” wrote Roger Sergel, managing editor of medical news at ABC. “If you are on line right now please advise….”
Then minutes later, “Important update. Baby may be breech.” Also included in Sergel’s email was a shorthand message from Besser, “No phone. Email only old. And not reliable. Pls send what u can. Baby may be breached. No hospital. Out in open air.”
Haiti has a high rate of mortality to both mother and child during birth. In a good situation, the stakes are high, but coupled with the earthquake-related trauma, birthing can be deadly.
Mishori was away from her computer but with iPhone in hand, she responded immediately. Among other medically relevant questions, she asked, “Is she fully dialated? Complete breech?? Footling?”
Mishori gave the ABC team who was with the woman instructions until they found out about a makeshift hospital an Israeli response team had set up on a soccer field, and took the woman there.
Later, Besser wrote, “To all: We’re with the Israeli’s… Should deliver vaginally. Thanks to everyone!” ABC News reported that the baby girl, although she was born prematurely, will be fine.
[Thanks: http://blog.georgetownvoice.com]