Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

App to help keep 'traveller's diarrhoea at bay

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 Jun, 2014 01:34 PM
    For those who are gastronomically adventurous, travelling is hardly any fun without savouring the succulent local dishes and drinks.
     
    Even as they soak themselves in the fresh flavours of a new destination, researchers have now developed an app to help travellers avoid what's commonly known as traveller's diarrhoea, a condition that affects an estimated 10 million travellers each year.
     
    Called 'Can I Eat This?', the app asks travellers to select the country they are visiting and answer a few questions about the item they are thinking of consuming.
     
    They need to answer questions such as whether the food item or the beverage was bought from a street vendor and whether it was cooked.
     
    “With 'Can I Eat This?', you can be more confident that your food and drink choices would not make you spend your international trip in the bathroom,” informed the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), a US government public health agency that developed the app.
     
    The app tells a prospective traveller to India that if a drink contains ice it is better to avoid it because, as the app explains, ice is usually made with tap water which can be unsafe in some countries, including India.
     
    The app is available for download on Andriod or iOS platform.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Did you find your spouse on Facebook or Twitter?

    Did you find your spouse on Facebook or Twitter?
    If you got married in the last few years, chances are that you may have found your life partner on a social networking site such as Twitter and Facebook - without you actually realising it.

    Did you find your spouse on Facebook or Twitter?

    'Smart' gloves to help soldiers scale vertical walls

    'Smart' gloves to help soldiers scale vertical walls
     If you have seen the movie "Mission Impossible - Ghost Protocol", you can not forget the scene where actor Tom Cruise scales and swings from world's tallest building Burj Khalifa in Dubai wearing adhesive gloves.

    'Smart' gloves to help soldiers scale vertical walls

    Four tomatoes a day may reduce kidney cancer risk

    Four tomatoes a day may reduce kidney cancer risk
    Love tomatoes? You have more reasons to relish them as a tomato-rich diet may lower kidney cancer risk, especially in case of women.

    Four tomatoes a day may reduce kidney cancer risk

    World's first 3D smartphone from Amazon?

    World's first 3D smartphone from Amazon?
    Move over ordinary smartphones as Amazon is reportedly planning to launch the world's first smartphone with a 3D display.

    World's first 3D smartphone from Amazon?

    Soon, robots to behave as humans?

    Soon, robots to behave as humans?
    Robots are good at computational tasks but fail miserably to walk, talk or recognise everyday objects. What if a robot could behave like a human?

    Soon, robots to behave as humans?

    Emotions lead people buy smartphones with bigger screens!

    Emotions lead people buy smartphones with bigger screens!
    People may find bigger screens more emotionally satisfying because they are using smartphones for entertainment as well as for communication purposes, a new research led by an Indian-origin scientist reveals.  

    Emotions lead people buy smartphones with bigger screens!

    PrevNext