instead of like a machining project where you remove materials. we have heart valves you used. image someone goes in for a heart valve transplant they are spending how much and what would this save by having this printed out using one of these techniqu techniques? the prosthetic valves you might buy may cost $20-30,000 surgery not with standing. this whole system costs $2,000. 12 now as o opposed to 30,00. people testing out maybe even students the idea in an engineering class they could use computer imagery design build small models and have them printed out to see if they are functional. right. you could learn about business
systems, what makes them cost 9% of gdp, less than half of what our system costs, is not necessarily the single payer, it s the limited liability. it s the health plans that clearly say we don t want defensive medicine, we don t want excessive procedures. and those countries have life expeck tansies as long as ours. is there anything in this bill you sflik. absolutely. i think it s a shame, it s a tragedy that state after state didn t come up with schemes to create affordability, to allow for pre-existing conditions, not to keep you from going from one job to another. i authored hr 3838 to give every person in america access to the same health care i enjoy. it can be done using leveraging private insurers. but more importantly, the states didn t do their job. that part of the federal bill i
recognition device. dozens of law enforcement agencies nationwide are about to start using this thing as early as september. the device is attached to iphones allowing officers to take pictures of people s faces, even scan their irises and then check for be matches in a criminal database. jamie colby is in our new york city newsroom with a look at it. reporter: hey, jon. this is very cool stuff, very csi. it s called morris, it s a hand held biometric device, and it can recognize people based on their eyes, their face, even their fingerprints. it connects to a smartphone, and that allows an officer to snap a picture of someone s face from up to five feet away or scan an iris from up to 6 inches away, and then they can do an immediate search of a database. the database actually growing for about four years now, and it s been installed in 48 states. the handheld system costs
we re talking about a new facial recognition device. dozens of law enforcement agencies nationwide are about to start using this thing as early as september. the device is attached to iphones allowing officers to take pictures of people s faces, even scan their irises and then check for be matches in a criminal database. jamie colby is in our new york city newsroom with a look at it. reporter: hey, jon. this is very cool stuff, very csi. it s called morris, it s a hand held biometric device, and it can recognize people based on their eyes, their face, even their fingerprints. it connects to a smartphone, and that allows an officer to snap a picture of someone s face from up to five feet away or scan an iris from up to 6 inches away, and then they can do an immediate search of a database. the database actually growing for about four years now, and it s been installed in 48 states. the handheld system costs