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Home Based Business

High-tech Prior Lake peninsula home open for tours [Video]

A home with state-of-the-art technology, a wellness center and a prime location on Prior Lake is one of the featured homes on the Artisan Home Tour. The homeowner of Home #8, from Mikan Custom Homes, is the founder of Admit One Home Systems – a home tech company – and Aurora One, a custom lighting business. The combination of those two make for a home thats fully loaded. The Artisan Home Tour runs through Oct. 20, Friday through Sunday, from 12 to 6 p.m.

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Home Based Business

Canton recovering from flooding, devastation from Helene [Video]

HARD BY THE STORM. ONE OF THOSE COMMUNITIES DEVASTATED IS CANTON IN HAYWOOD COUNTY, WITH HIGH FLOOD WATERS IMPACTING SEVERAL HOMES AND BUSINESSES NEAR ITS DOWNTOWN. OUR REY LLERENA REPORTS ON THE DAMAGE INSIDE OF THE TOWN AND ITS RECOVERY EFFORTS. EXPOSED WIRES, MUD ON THE WALLS. ALL THIS DAMAGE IS A REMINDER OF THE DEVASTATION HELENE BROUGHT TO CANTON. THOUGH VOLUNTEERS HAVE BEEN HERE CLEANING SINCE THE STORM PASSED, IT MAY BE MONTHS BEFORE THIS SPACE IS USABLE AGAIN. IT TOOK US FOUR DAYS JUST TO PIECE THE MUD. THE WORST PART OF THE MUD OUT OF THE BUILDING. BOBBY SHELTON AND VOLUNTEERS ARE SORTING THROUGH THE DAMAGE LEFT BY HELENES FLOODING. TO BETHEL, CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, WE TAKE A LOT OF WATER DAMAGE. IT DIDNT. IT DIDNT DO AS MUCH DAMAGE AS SOME OF THEM HAD. BUT BLOW WINDOWS OUT AND MUD. LOTS AND LOTS AND LOTS OF MUD. SOME OF THE SCHOOLS PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT FENCES ALL TURNED INTO DEBRIS LEFT BEHIND BY THE STORM. WE WERE TOLD THREE YEARS AGO THIS WAS ONCE IN A LIFETIME STORM, AND HERE WE ARE AGAIN. CANTON MAYOR ZEB SMATHERS SAYS ITS THE WORST FLOOD TO HIT THE TOWN IN ITS HISTORY, DESTROYING SEVERAL BUSINESSES AND HOMES ALONG THE PIGEON RIVER, AN AREA HE SAYS HAS SUFFERED ECONOMICALLY. SO IF THOSE BUSINESSES WANT TO GET BACK OPEN, WE SUPPORT THEM 100%. IF THEY SAY WE CANT BE DOING THIS EVERY FEW YEARS, I RESPECT THAT AND ILL SUPPORT THEM. 100%. IN THE MEANTIME, HE SAYS, RECOVERY EFFORTS ARE AT FULL SPEED, USING LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE PAST, BUT ITS A LONG WAY TO GO FORWARD. BUT THERE IS A PATH. WEVE WITNESSED IT HERE IN CANTON, SO I THINK THATS PART OF OUR OBLIGATION IS TO SAY TO OUR NEIGHBORS, THERE IS A PATH FORWARD. ITS GOING TO BE UPS AND DOWNS, BUT IT DOES EXIST AND HOPE REMAINS. WITH THE WATER LINE STILL VISIBLE FROM HELENES FLOOD. SHELTON SAYS ITS A REMINDER OF THE ONGOING CLEANUP FROM THE STORM. IT WILL TAKE A MINIMUM OF TWO MONTHS TO GET IT BEFORE IT WOULD BE EVEN CLOSE TO BEING USABLE. AS WE TAKE ONE LAST LOOK AT ALL THE MUD ON THE WALL, ITS A REMINDER THE MAYOR SAYS, OF ALL THE RECOVERY AND THE HELP THIS AREA WILL NEED FOR THE FORESEEABLE FUTURE.

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Home Based Business

Your showerhead and toothbrush are teeming with viruses [Video]

The warm, damp environments of your showerhead and toothbrush are the perfect breeding ground for microbes, and a new study has identified hundreds of viruses that live there, showing the vast biodiversity to be found in the average home. Related video above: Should you get rid of your toothbrush after being sick?These viruses, however, are not the kind that will give you the common cold or flu (or worse). Called bacteriophages, or phages for short, they are the natural enemy of bacteria. Each tiny, tripod-looking phage has evolved to hunt, attack and gobble up a specific bacterial species.”The number of viruses that we found is absolutely wild,” Erica Hartmann, an associate professor at Northwestern University’s McCormick School of Engineering who led the study, said in a statement. “We found many viruses that we know very little about and many others that we have never seen before. It’s amazing how much-untapped biodiversity is all around us.”Researchers from the university studied samples of biofilms the glue-like communities of microorganisms attached to a surface from 34 toothbrushes and 92 showerheads to reach their conclusions, which were published Wednesday in the journal Frontiers in Microbiomes.They had already collected the samples from a previous study that investigated the types of bacteria inhabiting these items we use every day.”One of things that we’ve started to be able to do is, from those same types of samples, look at not just which bacteria are there, but actually which bacteriophages,” Hartmann told CNN.Bacteriophages are already being used in clinical trials as a potential solution to the growing problem of antibiotic resistance. By infecting and replicating inside a host bacterium, phages could kill pathogens and form the basis of new drugs to treat antibiotic-resistant or superbugs.”There’s also interest in designing maybe more sophisticated drugs, so that instead of taking a broad-spectrum antibiotic and wiping out your entire microbiome, you would be able to take this drug that would only affect the pathogen and leave the rest of your microbiome intact,” Hartmann said.In the United States alone, more than 2.8 million antimicrobial-resistant infections occur each year, while the World Health Organization labels the problem as one of the biggest global public health threats since it could make standard medical treatments like surgery, cesarean sections and chemotherapy much riskier.By sequencing the bacteria’s DNA, and then examining their corresponding phages using some “fairly complicated computer analyses,” the researchers “have been able to tell us a massive amount about what’s actually in there,” said Joe Parker, a senior research fellow at the UK’s National Biofilms Innovation Centre, who wasn’t involved in the study.In total, researchers say they identified 614 different viruses on the samples, though Hartmann added that there were probably many more present, since almost every sample contained a unique constellation of microbes.Parker notes that researchers probably identified a “minimum of 22 different bacterial viruses (phages) across these samples and depending on where you draw the line in terms of believing the data analysis, which is a computer model, there could be upwards of 600 different types of phages.”On the showerheads, many of the microbes originated from water sources, while those on toothbrushes came from a mixture of the human mouth and the surrounding environment. “There’s just an enormous amount of microbial diversity. And for every bacterium, there’s potentially tens or hundreds or even thousands of viruses that infect it,” Hartmann said, noting that viruses mutate very quickly, too.She hypothesized that a bacterium in your mouth could transfer to your toothbrush, taking its viruses with it and these could keep evolving on the toothbrush.”And so, it’s possible that there are viruses that are basically endemic to your toothbrush and are found nowhere else on earth,” she said. “We don’t know that, that’s just one hypothesis that might explain the enormous amount of variety.”While the idea that our homes are harboring so many tiny creatures may seem unsettling, Hartmann believes we should learn to appreciate our little guests.”Microbes are everywhere all the time We wouldn’t be able to digest our food or fend off infection if we didn’t have our microbes,” Hartmann said. “As much as we might initially react with a little ick factor, I think it’s really important to approach the microbial world with a sense of wonder and curiosity that these are actually things that do an enormous amount of good and potentially harbor an enormous potential for biotechnology.”

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Home Based Business

Be Alert to Carbon Monoxide Dangers During, After Hurricane Milton [Video]

WEDNESDAY, Oct. 9, 2024 (HealthDay News) — High winds, torrential rain: All dangerous, but there’s a silent killer lurking in the aftermath of hurricanes like Milton — carbon monoxide. Experts at the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) are warning of the potentially lethal effects of carbon monoxide (CO), emitted by the gas generators folks

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Home Based Business

A Singaporean entrepreneur’s Shanghai story [Video]

Meet Linda Painan is a female entrepreneur from Singapore who has been calling Shanghai home for nearly three decades. As the chairperson of The Expatriate Center, Linda is passionate about creating an inclusive community for expats. For more