Peer-Review: Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC’s Electronic …








CHARLOTTE, N.C., July 15, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC’s electronic surveillance framework for hospitalized kids could significantly reduce false-positive identification of serious health conditions, according to peer-reviewed research in Pediatric Critical Care Medicine.

The retrospective study of 16,239 Children’s Hospital pediatric admissions between January 2006 and December 2013 compared the use of vital signs, a common indicator of patient condition, to that of PeraHealth’s Pediatric Rothman Index (PRI) – a patient condition score using an algorithm comprised of vital signs, lab tests and nurse assessments (skin issues, mental state) – to identify patients requiring urgent intervention with pediatric ICU transfer.

The research, conducted by Children’s Hospital clinicians, found that use of vital signs alone led to false-positive identification of serious events almost half of the time (46 percent). The PRI had a false-positive rate of just 1 percent.  

“Many symptoms of serious pediatric conditions are also found in common conditions that do not require immediate intervention, and vital signs alone cannot discriminate between the two situations,” said Robert Clark, M.D., chief of pediatric critical care medicine at Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC. “Our research found the Pediatric Rothman Index to be a favorable electronic trigger for alerting clinicians to the need for rapid response teams, complementing the efforts of our nurses and physicians.”

The Joint Commission estimates that 85 to 99 percent of alarms in hospitals do not require clinician intervention. This can lead to alarm fatigue and other alarm hazards, which the ECRI Institute found to be the number one patient safety concern for 2015.

“False-positive alarms cause anxiety for care teams, patients and families, and can lead to clinicians becoming desensitized to true patient emergencies while placing pressure on already constrained hospital resources,” said PeraHealth Co-Founder and Chief Science Officer Michael J. Rothman, Ph.D. “Having a surveillance system that reliably alerts care teams to the need for emergency intervention is essential to helping clinicians provide the right care to the right patients at the right time.”

Powered by the peer-reviewed Rothman Index™, a disease-agnostic universal score for predicting patient readmission and mortality risk, PeraHealth software automatically pulls data from any major electronic health record (EHR) in real-time. The data is translated into a 0-100 Rothman Index score and presented in color-coded graphs trending patient condition across any care setting, promoting care team communication across shifts and alerting clinicians earlier to unexpected health problems.

About PeraHealth
PeraHealth provides hospitals and health systems with a single solution for real-time clinical surveillance across all patient populations and care settings. Based on the peer-reviewed Rothman Index™, a universal score for predicting patient readmission and mortality risk over time, PeraHealth software can pull data from all major EHR systems with no added manual data entry for staff. The result is an earlier warning system alerting clinicians to the potential for subtle patient deterioration to help optimize ICU use, hardwire rapid response teams and enhance palliative care services. More than 2.5 million clinicians, patients and families have benefited from solutions from PeraHealth and Alive Sciences, its Sarasota, Fla. affiliate. For more information about Charlotte, N.C.-based PeraHealth, visit www.perahealth.com.

 

 

 

SOURCE PeraHealth

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Moogfest Couldn’t Survive in Asheville: Festival Officials

c 2014, WLOS ABC 13 | Portions are Copyright 2014 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or distributed.

WLOS News 13 provides local news, weather forecasts, traffic updates, notices of events and items of interest in the community, sports and entertainment programming for Asheville, NC and nearby towns and communities in Western North Carolina and the Upstate of South Carolina, including the counties of Buncombe, Henderson, Rutherford, Haywood, Polk, Transylvania, McDowell, Mitchell, Madison, Yancey, Jackson, Swain, Macon, Graham, Spartanburg, Greenville, Anderson, Union, Pickens, Oconee, Laurens, Greenwood, Abbeville and also Biltmore Forest, Woodfin, Leicester, Black Mountain, Montreat, Arden, Weaverville, Hendersonville, Etowah, Flat Rock, Mills River, Waynesville, Maggie Valley, Canton, Clyde, Franklin, Cullowhee, Sylva, Cherokee, Marion, Old Fort, Forest City, Lake Lure, Bat Cave, Spindale, Spruce Pine, Bakersville, Burnsville, Tryon, Columbus, Marshall, Mars Hill, Brevard, Bryson City, Cashiers, Greer, Landrum, Clemson, Gaffney, and Easley.

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Deloitte Corporate Finance LLC Advises Frontline Performance Group in its …








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    As used in this document, “Deloitte” means Deloitte LLP. Please see www.deloitte.com/us/about for a detailed description of the legal structure of Deloitte LLP and its subsidiaries. Certain services may not be available to attest clients under the rules and regulations of public accounting.
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CHARLOTTE, N.C., July 16, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Deloitte Corporate Finance LLC (DCF) acted as exclusive financial advisor to Winter Park, Florida-based Frontline Performance Group (FPG) in its recapitalization with ABRY Partners (ABRY).  FPG, a leading outsourced service provider of sales performance management, engaged DCF to explore various strategic alternatives.  

“After spending over 20 years helping our clients maximize their salesforce potential, I knew that I wanted Deloitte Corporate Finance’s help in finding a financial partner to allow FPG to accelerate its growth strategy.  Their deep knowledge of the investor universe helped us find a great financial partner in ABRY,” said Ziad Khoury, CEO, Frontline Performance Group.

“FPG’s reputation for transforming sales cultures and driving sales and service improvements, combined with our capital advisory experience and business services industry knowledge, helped FPG achieve their strategic objectives,” said John Deering, managing director, Deloitte Corporate Finance LLC.

About Frontline Performance Group 
Founded in 1993 and headquartered in Winter Park, Fla., FPG is a leading outsourced service provider focused on sales and service performance management across several industries including travel and hospitality. FPG provides on-site sales and service management, recruiting and training solutions, and human capital development to help optimize sales performance at consumer contact points. FPG’s combination of proven strategic planning processes, in-house research, and emerging tech-enabled platform differentiate it from other service providers. For more information, visit www.frontlinepg.com.

About ABRY Partners 
Founded in 1989, ABRY Partners is a media, communications, and business and information services focused private equity investment firm. Since its founding, ABRY has completed over $42 billion of transactions, representing investments in over 450 companies. The firm is currently managing over $4.3 billion of total capital and is investing out of a $1.9 billion private equity fund, $950 million senior equity fund, and a $1.5 billion senior debt fund.  For more information, visit www.abry.com.

About Deloitte Corporate Finance LLC 
Deloitte Corporate Finance LLC (DCF) provides strategic advisory services and MA advice that help corporate, entrepreneurial and private equity clients create and act upon opportunities for liquidity, growth and long-term advantage. With an in-depth understanding of the marketplace and access to a global network of investment bankers, we help clients confidently pursue strategic transactions in both domestic and global markets. DCF, together with the Corporate Finance Advisory practices within the Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Limited network of member firms, include in excess of 1,900 professionals, who work collaboratively across 150 international locations. With our significant experience providing investment banking services across key industries, we are able to offer our clients solutions that help them to achieve their strategic objectives. For more information, visit www.investmentbanking.deloitte.com.

Prior engagement performance is no guarantee of future performance and may not be representative of the experience of other clients. This communication is for informational purposes only and is not intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale of a security.

Deloitte Corporate Finance LLC, an SEC registered broker-dealer and member of FINRA and SIPC, is an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Deloitte Financial Advisory Services LLP and affiliate of Deloitte Transactions and Business Analytics LLP. Investment banking products and services within the United States are offered exclusively through Deloitte Corporate Finance LLC. For more information, visit www.investmentbanking.deloitte.com.  Certain services may not be available to attest clients under the rules and regulations of public accounting.

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SOURCE Deloitte Corporate Finance LLC



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Shark Attacks Aren’t Biting Into Tourism, Carolinas’ Business Owners Say

CORRECTION: There were 23 total shark attacks reported in Australia in 2014. That fact was misstated in an earlier version of this article.

Shark attacks in North and South Carolina are not preventing people from vacationing on the states’ beaches, local business owners say — though tourists may be thinking twice about diving into the water.

It’s only July, but the Carolinas have already seen 12 shark attacks in 2015, compared with a normal average of four to six for the region in an entire year. To put that in further perspective, the entire country of Australia, which gets wide media attention for shark attacks, saw a total of 23 attacks in 2014.

But none of that is keeping families away from places like the Outer Banks, Hilton Head or Myrtle Beach.

No one has canceled their summer reservations at Outer Banks Blue, a vacation home rental company in North Carolina, said owner Tim Cafferty. He’s actually seen a spike in business.

“Over the last two weeks we’ve seen more last-minute rentals than we have in the last five years,” Cafferty said. “It’s really been ironic. I think people understand it’s an isolated event, and that the chances are infinitesimally small.”

10 cities where vacation rental listings are booming

Cafferty added, however, that the attacks may be leading to greater customer traffic for inland businesses.

“I believe we’ve seen a better economic situation here, quite frankly, that people are doing other things besides going to the beach,” he said. He’s seen increased tourist attendance at the Wright Brothers National Memorial, para-sailing on the more enclosed “Soundside” waters, and ropes courses.

The Island Resort and Inn, a hotel off the beach in Oak Island, N.C., where two of the attacks have occurred, already has customers rebooking vacations for next year, said office manager Rose Dauphinais.

“I’ve been coming here since 1976, and this was the first shark attack I’ve ever heard of,” she said, but added that “no one has canceled their trips.”

That said, the attacks are serious — and unusual — said George Burgess, director of the Florida Program for Shark Research at the University of Florida.

“It’s an all-time high for a yearly total. It’s an unprecedented situation,” he said. “This is just a slap in the face that we need to be more careful entering the sea.”

Even with this year’s unusually high number of attacks in the Carolinas, in context, there are more pressing dangers at the beach than sharks, Burgess said. The world saw only three known shark-attack fatalities in 2014. The last fatal shark attack in South Carolina was in 1852.

Burgess added that the number shark attacks is directly related to the number of people in the water.

“It’s sort of a back-handed compliment to the chambers of commerce who are bringing that many people into the waters,” he said. “The next step is development of beach safety personnel and services to reduce the risk of shark attacks on their beaches that are now drawing so many people.”

Tourism brought $21.3 billion to North Carolina in 2014, said Wit Tuttell, executive director of Visit North Carolina. Six and a half million people spent their time visiting North Carolina beaches in 2014, according to a survey from the organization.

This year’s tourism season has yet to take a hit from the shark attacks, said Lee Nettles, executive director of the Outer Banks Visitors’ Bureau. Nettles said his office has seen an increased number of concerned calls from visitors, but that people aren’t canceling their trips.

How summer vacation can hit your Christmas budget

“Clearly something extraordinary is going on, but the three shark encounters we’ve had in the Outer Banks are relative to the 5 million visitors annually,” he said. “Three shark bites is three too many, but it’s still a relatively safe environment.”

At the Ocean Boulevard Bistro and Martini Bar in Kitty Hawk, N.C., owner Donny King said he saw an uptick in business at his restaurant during the Fourth of July weekend. He’s personally taking precautions, but he’s not staying out of the water.

“I’m a surfer myself. My nephew is in town with us working at the restaurant, and we go surfing as much as we can,” he said. “We just make sure we’re in a busy area and staying near life guards.”

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Grant Millin, Asheville resident since 1980 and management consultant …

Grant Millin announced in February that he would run for Asheville city council. Today, he followed through and filed the paperwork to make it official. Millin is a veteran of the Navy and currently runs a consulting firm. He has previously run for chairman of the county Democratic party in 2011.

Often seen on comment boards and internet forums discussing local governance and other issues, Millin has been known to share his opinions through letters to the media as well. See also.

 

Press release from Grant Millin campaign:

Long-time Asheville resident Grant Millin registered as an Asheville city council candidate today. Grant’s parents bought the historic T.S. Morrison Co. hardware store in 1980 which is now the site of Lexington Avenue Brewery. Grant understands cities like Asheville are ready for the Next New Deal and that means new leadership.

“A lot has changed in Asheville since we landed in the middle of plans to destroy Downtown Asheville for the sake of another mall. We sacrificed and I remember well the hard work it took to move from 1980 Asheville to where we are today, with all the risks and opportunities behind 2015 Asheville.” Grant’s most recent contribution on behalf of the citizens of Asheville is Smart Grid DEEP, an initiative that adds more business value and current sustainability strategy to the important Asheville Community Energy Plan task force work he participated in. “I get business needs and I get sustainability needs,” said Grant.

In Grant’s first 100 days in office he will submit proposals for:

– A WNC Public Advocate Office based on ombud (‘ombudsman’) service programs operating across the US and in other developed nations.

– Sustain Asheville / Sustain WNC, a genuine open innovation program expanding on GroWNC (also see the East of the Riverway community program) and replacing AdvantageWest. Fellow candidates Marc Hunt and Julie Mayfield are members of the HUB Community Economic Development Alliance (Asheville HUB). The Asheville HUB has produced some results over the years, but lacks a genuine innovation management practice accessible to any community member with solutions, or capabilities that can be developed for the innovator’s solution, or attached to a solution developed by others. Sustain Asheville replaces or reforms the Asheville HUB for a bigger, deeper, and resilience enhancing innovation and opportunity ecosystem.

– Smart Grid DEEP, an initiative connecting the Asheville Community Energy Plan to the emerging North Carolina Clean Power Plan.

Grant attends St. Mark’s Lutheran Church and served honorably on US Navy active duty and in the reserves. “Asheville city council and the citizens of Asheville, especially those living at the bottom the economy, need at least one council member with my capabilities, sense of duty, and background of sacrifice for this city, county, state, and nation. Clearly for those hovering just above or under the hopelessly outdated Federal poverty income lines find all market housing options in Asheville unaffordable. There are also more housing quality risks like buildings needing rehabilitation and remodel for those in the bottom 50-25 percent of incomes here,” said Grant.

There a constant flow of demands on members of city council today each having a variety of risk and opportunity levels attached. Being one of the most educated and experienced candidates, Grant offers innovative approaches to managing these risks and opportunities beyond what city staff. Civic engagement and measuring and monitoring tangible value delivered to the citizens is central to ways Grant will seek to secure the viability of Asheville and grow benefits for those currently living at the base of the economy.

Grant sees the conventional wisdom that states Asheville is on its own and adjusting property taxes up to compensate for anemic ‘intergovernmental’ (state and Federal) tax revenues is one of many clear paths to insatiability we are on. Grant cites Federal Reserve and Credit Suisse data showing US household wealth alone hit $80 trillion in 2014. “The contest of wills you see in Raleigh and in congress affects Asheville. That’s unavoidable. When it comes to money, the USA has money. That’s not what’s lacking today,” said Grant.

 

‘New direction’ means new platforms enhancing our democratic principles

There is very little in the way of entrepreneurship, ‘low-hanging’ fruit local government policy, and philanthropic strategy left that can fully avoid emerging risks without greater state and Federal collaboration delivering increased tangibles for relatively isolated, mid-size economies like Asheville’s. “Effectively coping with our risks and mobilizing around our opportunities is beyond the capacities of many old school leaders at this point. My knowledge of modern strategy and innovation practices must surely be needed,” said Grant.

While Grant is developing a nonprofit to house the Sustain Asheville / Sustain WNC program and temporality launch the WNC Public Advocate Office, he has no conflicts of interest that would prevent him from voting on each council issue. While Grant has a great deal to offer in helping to settle Asheville’s risks and opportunities in terms of the near and long-term, there will be a constant flow of issues coming before city council from a range of directions. “Expect that I will judiciously educate myself on each matter and be open to a range of community voices,” said Grant.

Grant will also be able to add value especially in the following city hall arenas:

– Use of evidence-based policy within Asheville, creating a wave of government policy reform that ideally feedbacks to results in Raleigh and congress.

– Developing and monitoring progress around the City’s Comprehensive Plan. The Comprehensive Plan will be developed during the first years of Grant’s first term on city council, 2016-2017. More importantly, solutions like Sustain Asheville ensure democratic strategic doing occurs to actually activate the notion that COA plans aren’t just more reams of paper collecting dust.

Sustainability innovation will set up Asheville as a responsible economic development leader

 

Two key areas of strategic innovation are where Grant sees significant value for the people of Asheville: poverty innovation and climate change innovation. “While not the only issues facing city council, supporting a strong state and national anti-poverty and human-caused climate change strategy from Asheville alleviates the deprivation the thousands of Asheville citizens living in poverty suffer, add more consumers with greater disposable income to the market, while targeting how to grow the economy while designing a more sustainable system.

How to get there includes better leadership in Raleigh and in congress than we see today. Cities like Asheville working much more collaboratively with one another can help set the bar higher. If we don’t at least allow some greater experimentation we’re sure to see even larger risk impacts than today.

I think it’s an assumption only to believe collaboration and strategy are at their heights within Asheville city limits. There’s more to be done, to learn, and probably a lot of leadership replacing to be had here. I’m only on my way to our city council, but I’m also a common citizen and am more than happy to speak out on the range of matters we face together… together meaning greater teamwork soon.

In the meantime a new innovation and opportunity ecosystem (for our needs Asheville will be in the center) that means enhancing and opening collaboration through organizations like Buncombe County Government; Land of Sky Regional Council; the North Carolina League of Municipalities; the U.S. Conference of Mayors; National League of Cities; National Association of Development Organizations; and the business, nonprofit, healthcare, and education communities. Of course new strategy is dependent on the buy-in of Mayor Manheimer and other council members… and of course who is elected this year.

We still have some resources and we’ll need to start leverage every once of it to get back on track. I’m doing what I can now, but I am built to be on Asheville city council and that’s where I can offer the greatest value for the largest number of citizens,” said Grant. Grant sees a new Sustain Asheville / Sustain WNC organization taking over where AdvantageWest and GroWNC concluded as being a catalyst for organized innovation and risk management. Grant would like to reform the HUB Community Economic Development Alliance as a more public open innovation platform to facilitate these strategic innovations at the City of Asheville (COA) and citywide levels.

We are not seeing a recession rebound like those in the 1980’s and 1990’s where a majority of Americans began to our system as providing needed results according to the US Consumer Sentiment Index. The 2015 World Happiness Report places the US in the same high bracket as Switzerland, but Mexico, Canada, and all the Scandinavian nations are operating at higher levels of happiness.

We need new capabilities to develop and manage opportunity and at least understand all of our risks better. Active citizens need to be asked to participate with new strategy tools. The level of complexity around our opportunities and risks is growing daily and Asheville can set the government innovation bar high. We must,” said Grant.

More about Grant

Grant has a Master of Project Management and Master of Entrepreneurship degree including studies for an MBA with Western Carolina University. He has a BA Interdisciplinary Studies, Independent Degree in Sustainability and Security Studies from UNC Asheville. He is a GroWNC consortium member, COA Asheville Community Energy Plan member, as well as a Leadership Asheville and COA Citizens’ Academy graduate. He was the North Carolina project manager for the historic Hydrogen Road Tour and also produced and was panelist on the Forum on Smart Grid and Hydrogen Economies at Duke University.

In Grant’s project management studies he covered major infrastructure programs like the Charlotte Area Transit System and ITER (hydrogen fusion) as well as community innovations like the Atlanta Regional Commission’s Livable Centers Initiative.

Grant’s campaign website GrantMillin.com has a range of policy changes, goals, and innovations he will work to see through on city council. Look for articles like Innovating the 2015 and future Asheville city council debates; Passenger Rail to Asheville? Add more value with sustainability innovation; Viable options to Sen. Apodaca’s inappropriate grid solutions exist; Asheville’s affordable housing challenge won’t get solved with magical thinking; Buncombe tourism advertising needs to be an industry expense versus public expense; Teamwork and an open source approach to our challenges can replace AdvantageWest; and What will Asheville City Center look like in ten years?

Grant is referenced over 100 times in the Asheville Citizen-Times archives. He has appeared on WLOS multiple times and in other media, or driven news stories. He won a 2014 Global Innovation Summit scholarship.

Grant’s detailed biographical sketch is available.


The race

The deadline to file for city council is this Friday the 17th of July. The other candidates who have formally filed for this fall’s primary ballot are: Rich Lee, Julie Mayfield, Corey Atkins, Marc Hunt (incumbent), Joe Grady, Brian Haynes, Carl Mumpower, Lindsey Simerly, and Lavonda Nicole Payne.   Others who have announce intentions to file are Keith Young, and Jonathan Wainscott although Wainscott has encountered legal trouble.

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North Carolina’s top job recruiter

CARY, N.C. — He’s young (not even 40-years-old), bright, energetic and the key person when it comes to bringing new jobs to North Carolina. What he and his team do over the next few years will have a direct link to the quality of your life and the lives of your children.

Christopher Chung’s parents came to the United States from Taiwan. He was born, raised and educated in Ohio. From 2010 to 2014, he helped recruit 78 new companies and more than 10,000 new jobs to the state of Missouri.

Today, he leads North Carolina’s first public-private economic development operation, the Economic Development Partnership of North Carolina. It’s under contract with and gets more than $17 million a year from the state. But it also gets hundreds of thousands more from private investors.

“All of these companies benefit indirectly when the state’s economy is growing at a healthy clip,” he told me recently at his office in a sprawling complex in Cary, outside of Raleigh. “Whether it’s through tourism, business recruitment and the like.”

Those investors include Duke Energy, the software company Red Hat, Bank of America and Wells Fargo. Supporters of this concept believe it gives the state more money and resources to go out and attract companies — among other things — without spending more taxpayer money.

In addition to promoting tourism (which is now a $21 billion business in North Carolina), the Economic Development Partnership also promotes the state’s exports and works to attract film and television production — something many feel has gotten a lot harder since the General Assembly eliminated the open-ended 25 percent tax credit the state gave film and TV producers.

Chung couldn’t discuss politics or policy with me. But he did say, “We still have incentives. That’s the important thing to know. We’ve got $10 million [a year]. It’s not a tax credit so much as it is a grant now. And that has helped us hook a few great productions. But again, make no mistake, [the 25 percent tax credit] is certainly a factor for some of these film and TV companies that we’re engaged in conversation with.”

One of the Partnership’s big priorities is recruiting companies that will bring jobs to the state. Much has been reported about North Carolina’s inability to attract an auto manufacturer when neighboring states (South Carolina, Georgia and Tennessee included) have.

“I think one of the things that may have held us back in the past is simply, as simple as it sounds, the lack of an available industrial site,” he said.

A 1,300-acre site near Liberty which is being touted by Greensboro and Randolph County is one of four sites within North Carolina that might be suitable for a car maker. The Piedmont Triad site has its advantages.

“Certainly some of the local investment that’s been made so far by the local community, that’s huge,” he said. “If you’re going to market this as a viable site, you want to make sure it’s actually under someone’s control and it can be delivered as a site. I think they (Greensboro and Randolph County) have done a lot of great work toward that end.”

Chung says a key to North Carolina recruiting jobs is not to get complacent. “We could have the best product in the world, but if we aren’t investing anything and going out and telling it to our audience, we can’t expect they’re going to find us.”

For more information on the Economic Development Partnership of North Carolina, check out its website: edpnc.com.

To watch some videos of how the Partnership is marketing North Carolina, visit its YouTube channel:
youtube.com/user/VisitNCVideo.

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LendingTree, Inc. Announces Schedule Change for Second Quarter 2015 …








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CHARLOTTE, N.C., July 16, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — LendingTree, Inc. (NASDAQ: TREE) today announced that it will release its second quarter 2015 financial results after market-close on Monday, August 3, 2015.  The conference call will be held at 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time on the same day.  The company had previously planned to release earnings the following day on Tuesday, August 4. 

Those interested in participating in the conference call may dial in five minutes prior to the start. The call will be simultaneously webcast via the company’s website at http://investors.lendingtree.com/

Conference call                                                                      
Toll free #:  (877) 606-1416
(707) 287-9313 outside the United States/Canada

To listen to a replay of the call
Toll free #: (855) 859-2056
(404) 537-3406 outside the United States/Canada
Replay Passcode: 72680126

Replay will be available beginning at 8:00 p.m. Eastern Time on Monday, August 3 until 11:59 p.m. on Saturday, August 8, 2015.

About LendingTree, Inc.

LendingTree, Inc. (NASDAQ: TREE) operates the nation’s leading online loan marketplace and provides consumers with an array of online tools and information to help them find the best loan for their needs.  LendingTree’s online marketplace connects consumers with multiple lenders that compete for their business, empowering consumers as they comparison-shop across a full suite of loans and credit-based offerings.  Since inception, LendingTree has facilitated more than 55 million loan requests.  LendingTree provides consumers with access to lenders offering home loans, home equity loans/lines of credit, personal loans, auto loans, student loans and more.

LendingTree, Inc. is headquartered in Charlotte, NC and maintains operations solely in the United States. For more information, please visit www.lendingtree.com.

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SOURCE LendingTree, Inc.

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Intelligent Apps Releases LaunchCode Shortcut With Notification Center



RALEIGH, N.C., July 14, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Available today for iPhone 4s users and above, LaunchCode Shortcut with Notification Center V1.3, an intelligent productivity app that streamlines daily tasks and instills human interface into your phone.



Photo – http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20150710/234931 
Photo – http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20150710/234932






Our world is an integration of thousands of languages and cultures. But there is a nonverbal language that every human being uses and understands; gestures! Humans use gestures as an integral part of their daily communication and now can communicate with an iPhone the same way. IPhone users will now have a single place from which to launch apps, websites, and actions with gestures.  Intelligent Apps’ crown jewel ‘LaunchCode’ App is THE productivity solution to help iPhone users whiz through the daily tasks on their phone and manage their busy schedule in an effortless, efficient and productive way. And LaunchCode’s innovative design promises to change the way people use their iPhone for good.



The ultimate goal of LaunchCode Shortcut Center is for users to use their iPhone as an extension of themselves and not as the focal point of their attention. They will be able to complete tasks, call contacts, listen to their favorite radio station, and even open Maps with directions to their home all without looking at their phone. Muscle memory will take over. All that is required is for one to draw their symbol on the screen and the phone will obey their command.



With the ease of this user interface, this is the only app iPhone users will ever need in their iPhone dock.  Unlike other productivity apps, LaunchCode injects the human interface into the iPhone. Humans communicate nonverbally in ways such as with gestures, letters and symbols, and now can communicate with an iPhone the same way.



Intelligent Apps plans to release two versions of LaunchCode. A free version which users can program with up to 5 app shortcuts and 5 action shortcuts and a paid version with which users can program unlimited app shortcuts and action shortcuts.



For more LaunchCode information, including more features, screenshots and videos, visithttp://intelligentappsinc.com.



Device Requirements:


  • iPhone and iPod touch
  • Requires iOS 6.0 or later
  • Size: 40 MB

Pricing and Availability:



Full version is available for $3.99 while the lite version is available for Free. Both apps are available worldwide exclusively through the App Store in the Productivity category.



About Intelligent Apps, LLC



Intelligent Apps is a North Carolina based software design firm dedicated to delivering innovative technology solutions for solving everyday problems. They help clients grow their business, be more productive, and achieve a balanced life through the use of technology.  To learn more, visit Intelligent Apps, LLC or email Admin@intelligentappsinc.com. Connect with Intelligent Apps on Facebook/LaunchCode and Twitter @LaunchCodeApp



Video demo: http://youtu.be/qN9QmvZqtJI
Website: www.intelligentappsinc.com
Contact email: Admin@intelligentappsinc.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LaunchCodeApp
Twitter: https://twitter.com/LaunchCodeApp
Free App Download: LaunchCode Free
Paid App Download: LaunchCode



Intelligent Apps, LLC                        
8480 Honeycutt Rd, Suite 200           
Raleigh, NC 27615



Contact:  Sam Al-Jamal



Title:    CEO/President



Phone: 9196286256





SOURCE Intelligent Apps, LLC

Related Links

http://www.intelligentappsinc.com

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UTC Aerospace Systems’ TASE 500 imaging systems selected for the Cirrus …








CHARLOTTE, N.C., July 15, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — UTC Aerospace Systems is providing Cloud Cap Technology TASE500 and TASE400 imaging system options for the new Cirrus Aircraft Perception Special Mission Aircraft. Cirrus Aircraft has selected the TASE imaging systems for its advanced observation aircraft because they provide an all-HD imaging solution giving operators improved situational awareness, an all-digital imaging chain for maximized processing capability and an optimized lens design for enhanced object recognition. UTC Aerospace Systems is a unit of United Technologies Corp. (NYSE: UTX).

“The Cloud Cap TASE imaging products have a long history of providing advanced imagery in special mission operations around the world. Supporting these technologies with the Cirrus Perception is a natural fit, as the total package will deliver the capability, quality and reliability our customers demand for their missions,” commented David Moser, vice president of Fleet and Special Mission Aircraft for Cirrus Aircraft.

All TASE cameras offer a continuous zoom functionality which provides optimal field of view across all zoom levels. The system also includes the ViewPoint user interface software tool which provides Tactical PED (Processing Exploitation and Dissemination) giving operators the ability to multi task, record and disseminate critical data for use when needed.

The low weight and cost-efficient TASE imaging systems can see in total darkness and through nearly all weather conditions. The daylight camera provides superior high-definition imagery for enhanced situational awareness. Cirrus Perception operators will benefit from the same features many law enforcement and military aircraft enjoy, including the ability to automatically and clearly track fixed or moving targets of interest, and easily mark and report the location of activity, 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

“Cirrus Aircraft is recognized as a leader in general aviation and innovation and we are honored to partner on the Cirrus Perception configuration. We look forward to supporting Cirrus Aircraft with the growing airborne imaging needs of this industry,” said John Trezza, vice president, ISR Space Systems.

UTC Aerospace Systems designs, manufactures and services integrated systems and components for the aerospace and defense industries.  UTC Aerospace Systems supports a global customer base, with significant worldwide manufacturing and customer service facilities.

United Technologies Corp., based in Hartford, Connecticut, provides high-technology systems and services to the building and aerospace industries. To learn more about UTC, visit the website at www.utc.com or follow the company on Twitter: @UTC.

SOURCE UTC Aerospace Systems

RELATED LINKS
http://www.utcaerospacesystems.com

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Volunteers critical at park

The Friends have regularly scheduled hikes, often off the beaten path, led by knowledgeable guides.

Members of the Friends of Sauratown Mountains participate in a litter pick-up event.

Quarterly meetings with educational programming are held for members of the Friends of Sauratown Mountains.

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PILOT MOUNTAIN — The Friends of Sauratown Mountains is an environmental group committed to preserving the Sauratown Mountain range, including Pilot Mountain State Park, Hanging Rock State Park, the Sauratown Trail, and surrounding waterways.

Established in 2010, the nonprofit organization has grown to more than 200 members. “We worked to create as broad a base as possible,” said President Jay Young, explaining how they reached out to existing groups such as Piedmont Land Conservancy, Sierra Club, park advisory committees, as well as hiking and river groups. All with an interest in the environment, the members have a wide range of knowledge and backgrounds.

The group is run entirely by volunteers. As a chapter of the Friends of NC State Parks, the group is invited to the state’s annual conference, has communications with upper park management in Raleigh, and has the option to work on statewide projects, according to Young.

The organization’s work is broad. The Friends provide volunteer hours, financial support and advocacy for the parks and natural areas.

During work days, scheduled twice each month, volunteers perform a range of tasks including trail maintenance, litter removal and fence repairs. “We do necessary work that the park rangers don’t have time to accomplish,” explained Young.

Horne Creek Trail, Mountain Trail and the new Tracks Trail are among the restoration projects completed at Pilot Mountain. The group also has done preliminary work for the upcoming loop trail, which will circle the base of the mountain with only a 5-percent grade. Connecting with the Grindstone Trail and bringing the park trails closer to the town, the six-mile loop is expected to be complete this fall.

According to Young, 1,070 hours were logged by trail volunteers last year. With trail work valued at around $1 per foot, the Friends have saved the parks tens of thousands of dollars. “Volunteer work on the Mountain Trail was valued at $24,000, which helps us get grants by matching funds,” explained Pilot Mountain Park Superintendent Matt Windsor.

Aside from work days, volunteers can help in the visitor center at Hanging Rock or run information booths at community events. “There is room for anybody in the Friends group, no matter their talents,” said Windsor.

Fundraising events are another critical component of the Friends. In its third year, Reach the Peaks is a fundraising collaboration with the Stokes County Arts Council. Scheduled for Sept. 26, the 11-mile hike benefits both organizations while also bringing tourism dollars to the area. “Tourism is the future for this region,” Young said.

Having established Reach the Peaks and a second fundraiser at Hanging Rock, the Waterfall Photography Challenge, the group intends to create an event for Pilot Mountain next. “We hope to create something similar, yet unique to Pilot Mountain,” said Young. Though the planning has begun, details have yet to be released.

In addition to the Stokes County Arts Council, the Friends have formed relationships with other area businesses. The Dan River Company, Singletree Gun And Plough, and Priddy’s General Store were a natural fit in partnering with events at Hanging Rock. As the group increases its efforts at Pilot Mountain, members hope to find new businesses willing to partner.

The funds raised so far have gone toward establishing a wildflower meadow, purchasing benches and installing informative display signs in the parks.

Advocacy is another important way that some members choose to serve. “Volunteers can often speak on behalf of the parks when employees can not,” said Windsor. Contacting state and local representatives about issues facing the parks is often the first step in finding solutions.

Membership benefits include quarterly meetings, members-only events and educational programming, such as training for using a chain saw, forest conservation and plant identification. Camaraderie with like-minded individuals, and the sense of satisfaction that comes from serving a cause are other valuable benefits.

“I have met some of my closest friends through my involvement with the Friends,” said Young.

For more information about getting involved with the Friends of Sauratown Mountains, visit www.sauratownfriends.org or call 336-706-2017.

Diane Blakemore may be reached at 336-368-2222 or on twitter @PilotReporter.

By Diane Blakemore

dblakemore@civitasmedia.com

englewoodindependent

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