Suicide Squad star Jai Courtney has signed on to Beef, starring Timothy Olyphant and Thomas Mann.
Beef follows a general manager (Mann) at a Midwestern branch of fast food restaurant Beefy’s who makes a $10,000 bet that was supposed to be a sure thing. When he loses, it puts him in the crosshairs of a comically brutal crime syndicate, led by Brian Gill (Olyphant) and his second in command, Dipper (Courtney), leaving him just 24 hours to outwit a rogue's gallery of thugs. He decides his only way out is to rob the place he knows best: Beefy’s. But of...
Beef follows a general manager (Mann) at a Midwestern branch of fast food restaurant Beefy’s who makes a $10,000 bet that was supposed to be a sure thing. When he loses, it puts him in the crosshairs of a comically brutal crime syndicate, led by Brian Gill (Olyphant) and his second in command, Dipper (Courtney), leaving him just 24 hours to outwit a rogue's gallery of thugs. He decides his only way out is to rob the place he knows best: Beefy’s. But of...
- 2/9/2017
- by Rebecca Ford
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
It's a safe bet that one of your doctors has an iPhone. But what you may not realize is that he or she is using it as part of your overall treatment. From reading Apgar scores to x-rays, there is a fascinating array of health-care tech available in app form. Some are created by savvy developers, while others are built out of necessity by the doctors. Currently, the Fda has no over-arching regulation in place for mobile medical apps, despite the fact that they have indicated in the past that under certain circumstances the iPhone may be considered a medical device and therefore regulated as one, according to a report by Brian Dolan on Mobihealthnews.
"Many medical imaging software applications are considered medical devices and, as such, are regulated by the Fda," says Justin Dearborn, CEO of Merge Healthcare. "Fda regulations mandate that rigorous processes must be followed during software development,...
"Many medical imaging software applications are considered medical devices and, as such, are regulated by the Fda," says Justin Dearborn, CEO of Merge Healthcare. "Fda regulations mandate that rigorous processes must be followed during software development,...
- 12/8/2009
- by Lydia Dishman
- Fast Company
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