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23 votes
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Nose dilators
Has anybody tried these? I just ordered a Silent Mammoth... which is essentially a coat hanger bent all fancy. It arrives in a few days. Anyway, anybody have any experience with these sorts of...
Has anybody tried these? I just ordered a Silent Mammoth... which is essentially a coat hanger bent all fancy. It arrives in a few days.
Anyway, anybody have any experience with these sorts of things? I went with this one purely because its metal and I don't want to have some ten-use plastic to recycle if this whole thing leads to improvement.
I don't have sleep apnea but I do think my cute button nose could use a little opening. :)
26 votes -
Fitness tracker smart watches that work well without a smartphone app?
A family member of mine recently got a cheap smart watch online. They weren't planning to use it with a phone app for privacy/security reasons. They thought using it without a phone would be fine,...
A family member of mine recently got a cheap smart watch online. They weren't planning to use it with a phone app for privacy/security reasons. They thought using it without a phone would be fine, since they just wanted it for the time and for the health features like steps, blood pressure, blood oxygen, sleep tracking, etc. and didn't need to see their texts or other notifications on the watch.
Unfortunately, when we tested the watch, we found that basically all of the features required connecting to a shady no-name company's app. You couldn't even set the time! You can't set the time on a watch without an app!
Also, the watch was a bit bulky for their wrist, and they would prefer a slimmer one.
People of Tildes, do you know of any smart watches that allow you to use the health tracking features without ever connecting to a smartphone? If so, are there any that are slimmer instead of being bulky?
14 votes -
New hearing aid company, Fortell, brings in Steve Martin and others
6 votes -
In a concerted effort to improve previously poor cancer survival rates, Denmark's success story has caught the attention of UK policymakers
9 votes -
New device lets homeowners test tap water for lead easily
17 votes -
Fly-eyed glasses may help the visually impaired with macular degeneration see well again
14 votes -
Apple’s AirPods Pro hearing health features are as good as they sound
20 votes -
Epilepsy drug Sulthiame could help people with sleep apnea get a good night's rest, Swedish study finds
11 votes -
Rapid UTI test that cuts detection time to forty-five minutes awarded Longitude prize – could herald sea change in antibiotic use by identifying correct treatments
26 votes -
Philips agrees to pay $1 billion to US patients who say they were injured by breathing machines
31 votes -
A US Food and Drug Administration-approved device offers a new treatment for tinnitus
32 votes -
US Senator calls for Department of Justice action against Philips for keeping CPAP machine complaints secret
20 votes -
Hearing aids, what's it like to have them?
Getting to that age that I know my hearing is declining and I have steady tinnitus, which I'm pretty used to already. Conversation in a quiet room is no problem but in a busy restaurant I have to...
Getting to that age that I know my hearing is declining and I have steady tinnitus, which I'm pretty used to already. Conversation in a quiet room is no problem but in a busy restaurant I have to concentrate and strain to pick up what's being said. I can tell I have to play things a bit louder than I used to. I'm delaying going to an audiologist for a test out of anxiety that I'll have to get hearing aids.
Which makes me wonder what they're really like - How does using them change your hearing? Do you get back the crisp highs and lows in music? Is conversation in a noisy place easier? How much maintenance do they require?
30 votes -
Steak dinners, sales reps and risky procedures: Inside the big business of clogged arteries
6 votes -
Sony releases its first over-the-counter hearing aids in the US
8 votes -
Food and Drug Administration clears path for hearing aids to be sold over the counter in the USA
18 votes -
Good vibrations - utilizing a vibrotactile glove to treat Parkinson's disease
4 votes -
LumiThera raises cash for medical device that uses light to fight vision loss
4 votes -
"Looping" has created an underground market for old Medtronic insulin pumps with a security flaw
10 votes -
You snooze, you lose: Insurers make the old adage literally true – Propublica/NPR investigation into billing and privacy concerns for sleep apnea patients
12 votes -
Faulty medical implants harm patients around world
4 votes -
You snooze, you lose: Insurers make the old adage literally true
8 votes -
The next smart home peripheral? Smart home gym, Tonal, reviewed.
4 votes -
DIYers hack insulin pump - create artificial pancreas
13 votes