Human is an Indian 2022 medical thriller television series released on 14 January 2022 on Disney+ Hotstar, which portrays the underbelly of human drug testing and the world of medical scams and aims to expose the nexus between pharmaceutical companies, large private hospitals, and government officials who exploit the poor in human trials for new drugs.[1][2][3]

Long before the emergence of Artificial Intelligence (AI) as we know it, the human imagination has been captivated by the idea of machines that could reason, communicate, and operate independently in the world. Literature, film, and television abound with both utopian and dystopian foretellings of a future in which humans coexist with their autonomous creations. Today, we find ourselves surrounded by voice recognition, self-driving cars, and chatbots that carry on conversations like uncanny disembodied oracles, and the centuries-old question has become more salient than ever: What does it mean to be human?


Download Human Series


DOWNLOAD 🔥 https://urllie.com/2yGcmU 🔥



Phil Wiser has received numerous patents for his pioneering work in internet music and television distribution technology. He broke new ground across the areas of IP-based content delivery, machine recommendation systems, video delivery over the Internet, and cybersecurity. Prior to his current position as Executive Vice President and Chief Technology Officer of Paramount Global, Wiser led the technology and product development transformation at Hearst Corporation, where he managed their technology migration to the cloud and established a data-driven, cloud-first media environment for their digital businesses. He created the digital businesses at Sony Music, including forging the groundbreaking deal to launch iTunes, and redefined the television experience with the first successful television program recommendation technology and the first system to deliver a full cable bundle via Internet delivery at Sezmi Corporation.

Melanie Mitchell is a professor at the Santa Fe Institute. Her current research focuses on conceptual abstraction and analogy-making in humans and AI systems. Melanie is the author or editor of six books and numerous scholarly papers in the fields of artificial intelligence, cognitive science, and complex systems. Her book Complexity: A Guided Tour (Oxford University Press) won the 2010 Phi Beta Kappa Science Book Award and was named by Amazon.com as one of the 10 best science books of 2009. Her latest book, Artificial Intelligence: A Guide for Thinking Humans (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux), has been shortlisted for the 2023 Cosmos Prize for Scientific Writing.

Stay in the loop on upcoming Being Human and other events at Sarah Lawrence College. Sign up and we'll reach out from time to time with events that may interest you. Many events this year will take place on campus as well as online, so sign up from anywhere in the world!

The Speakers Series is an action-oriented program that provides a unique opportunity for human rights organizations to collaborate with a municipality. Organizations can interact, educate, and discuss human rights and racial equity and justice issues with a large community audience. Each program may include a speaker, film screening, and/or panel discussion and and/or audience question and answer period.

Syfy's Being Human came to a close last night, delivering a finale that managed to capture the heart of the series with an ending that was bittersweet but by no means unsatisfying. Spoilers if you haven't seen it "There Goes the Neighborhood Part 3," the series finale of Being Human.

Four seasons ago, Being Human was a supernatural drama trying to find its place at a network that was taking efforts to loosen the boundaries of the genre that once defined it. Not only was this series not technically science fiction, but it was also yet another attempt at a remake of a British series. Few of those seem to find much success. Being Human never blew up to be a massively popular "hit" series for Syfy, but it did settle into a fast and comfortable groove, focusing its first season on three housemates, each battling their own demons more literally than the average twenty something would. Their unlikely friendship -- a ghost, a vampire and a werewolf not only living together but getting along -- quickly became the heart of the series as their supernatural natures drew them in and out of conflict with others of their kind. To end the drama fittingly, Being Human only ever had to go back to the bond that brought and kept these characters together. And it did, using sacrifice and love to justify its otherwise bittersweet ending, as only two of the four lead characters remained when all was said and done.

There are series like Friends that end with characters leaving an empty apartment or their office or whatever place brought them together. For Being Human, ending the series with Aidan burning the house to the ground seems fitting enough, given the dark nature of the building. I would've liked it if Season 4 had spent more time focusing on the house, to be honest, as I think there would've been more story there, but I'm not sure how long show runner Anna Fricke and the other writers had to prepare this conclusion. Either way, a secret room and nasty little girl causing problems was a nice enough way to bring the story back to the house, which not only brought Aidan, Josh and Sally (and eventually Nora) together, but also served as the death spot for more than one character.

The finale didn't take long to resolve the prophesied event wherein Aidan snaps Josh's neck. Crazed and baited by the house, Aidan was ready to kill Josh at the start of the episode but Sally managed to put a stop to it, first by buying some time and then by putting whatever life was left in her into Aidan, essentially curing him of being a vampire and costing Sally her existence. She was gone and Aidan was alive. Aidan celebrated this first by eating a massive cheeseburger and fries, and then later by getting hammered and passing out in the snow. Cut to Aidan finding out he's aging rapidly and won't survive the week.

Some might try to argue that Sally's sacrifice was in vein. After all, she gave her "life" for Aidan and he died anyway. But she saved Josh in the process, and she saved Aidan from making what would have been his biggest mistake and regret. If Aidan had killed Josh, I'm not sure he would've ever come back from that. Let's also take into account that Aidan used his final moments to destroy the house, protecting anyone else from its harmful ways. And then he died and got his door, which I don't think would've been possible if he would have died as a vampire. So after two hundred years, I'd say Aidan had a good run and his death wasn't a total loss, as Sally was there waiting for him on the other side of that door.

Apart from having Aidan and Sally turn human and live happily ever after, we really couldn't have asked for a happier ending. And given the choice between an overly happy -- read: sappy -- ending that gives everyone exactly what they want, I'll take a bit of bittersweet if there's depth and meaning behind the loss, and I think Being Human nailed it there. Both Aidan and Sally were living second lives. This is a series that acknowledges that death isn't the end of the line. Knowing they earned their doors -- Sally lost her own door when Aidan was in trouble in Season 1, so I think it's fitting she was waiting for him behind hiss -- and that they've moved on together offers a comforting sense of closure to both of their existences.

Maybe Being Human wasn't technically sci-fi and maybe it was a remake of another series. People have often voiced complaints about one or the other when it comes to this series, but as a drama that worked suspense, occasional horror, occasional humor, plenty of drama and more charm than it probably had any right to have given the subject matter -- part of that is a real credit to the chemistry of its cast, the other part is great writing -- Being Human was a gem of a series, it had a great run and I'm really going to miss it.

The site is secure. 

 The https:// ensures that you are connecting to the official website and that any information you provide is encrypted and transmitted securely.

Background:  Human adenoviruses typically cause self-limited respiratory, gastrointestinal, and conjunctival infections in healthy children. In late 2021 and early 2022, several previously healthy children were identified with acute hepatitis and human adenovirus viremia.

Results:  A total of 15 children were identified with acute hepatitis - 6 (40%) who had hepatitis with an identified cause and 9 (60%) who had hepatitis without a known cause. Eight (89%) of the patients with hepatitis of unknown cause tested positive for human adenovirus. These 8 patients plus 1 additional patient referred to this facility for follow-up were included in this case series (median age, 2 years 11 months; age range, 1 year 1 month to 6 years 5 months). Liver biopsies indicated mild-to-moderate active hepatitis in 6 children, some with and some without cholestasis, but did not show evidence of human adenovirus on immunohistochemical examination or electron microscopy. PCR testing of liver tissue for human adenovirus was positive in 3 children (50%). Sequencing of specimens from 5 children showed three distinct human adenovirus type 41 hexon variants. Two children underwent liver transplantation; all the others recovered with supportive care.

Conclusions:  Human adenovirus viremia was present in the majority of children with acute hepatitis of unknown cause admitted to Children's of Alabama from October 1, 2021, to February 28, 2022, but whether human adenovirus was causative remains unclear. Sequencing results suggest that if human adenovirus was causative, this was not an outbreak driven by a single strain. (Funded in part by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.). 152ee80cbc

download lagu somewhere only we know versi wanita

download doa ruqyah tempat usaha

hoopla app download