Jonah Comstock
As part of a new partnership with the National Basketball Association, Under Armour will help the sporting organization develop a new consumer app, called NBA Fit.
Katherine Morley makes a donation at the Hirsh Library at Tufts.
The old Dexcom Share, with charging cradle.
CareScape V100, a GE patient monitor.
As his time in office draws to a close, President Obama secured his reputation as our first geek president by hosting a tech startup demo day in the White House last week.
IBM has finalized plans to acquire Merge Healthcare for $1 billion, in the hopes that assets from the medical imaging software company can teach IBM's cognitive computing unit Watson to "see" medical images.
The Dexcom G4 receiver
Continuous glucose monitors are right now a good tool for a certain subset of people with diabetes, but there's still a majority of people, especially with Type 2 diabetes, for whom fingerstick glucometers are still the cheaper, more convenient option.
Arizona Governor Doug Ducey carved out a place for mobile health in his plan for the state's new Medicaid plan this week, but some critics think the initiative could miss the mark for a low-income population less likely to have smartphones.
Apparently Under Armour isn't the only apparel company that can play the fitness app game.
Brian Garcia, Welltok's new chief technology and product officer.