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The Tennessee Do-Not-Call / Do-Not-Text Telephone Sales Solicitation law T.C.A. Section 65-4-401 et seq., directs the Tennessee Public Utility Commission to promulgate regulations and to compile and maintain
a "Do-Not-Call / Do-Not-Text Register." The register consists of land line and cell phone numbers of Tennessee residential telephone subscribers who have elected not to receive telephone solicitations. Business numbers may not be included on the list.
The law prohibits those attempting to sell consumer goods and services by telephone from calling or texting telephone numbers that appear on the " Do-Not-Call / Do-Not-Text" Register. However, there are some exemptions: First, telephone solicitors may still contact in response to an express invitation or permission by the person being contacted. Second, solicitors may contact on behalf of a not-for-profit organization if the call or text is made by a member of the specific not-for-profit organization. Third, soliciting is allowed if the person or entity making the call or text has had a business relationship with the person being contacted within the previous twelve (12) months. Fourth, solicitation is permitted if the business contacting does not sell or engage in telephone solicitation and does not make more than three (3) calls or texts in any one
calendar week.
The Tennessee Do-Not-Call / Do-Not-Text law only authorizes the regulation of telemarketing for commercial purposes; political telemarketing is not covered by this law. Because of free speech guarantees in the U.S. Constitution, the U.S. Supreme Court has allowed for the regulation of commercial speech but has provided political speech with much greater protection from government regulation. Therefore, political speech,
including telemarketing promoting such, is not regulated by any state or federal Do-Not-Call / Do-Not-Text program. For non-registration questions, call
615-741-2904 or
615-770-6897.
All articles published by MDPI are made immediately available worldwide under an open access license. No special permission is required to reuse all or part of the article published by MDPI, including figures and tables. For articles published under an open access Creative Common CC BY license, any part of the article may be reused without permission provided that the original article is clearly cited. For more information, please refer to
Feature papers represent the most advanced research with significant potential for high impact in the field. A Feature Paper should be a substantial original Article that involves several techniques or approaches, provides an outlook for future research directions and describes possible research applications.
Abstract: This paper addresses the problem of unilateral contact interaction by an under-actuated quadrotor UAV equipped with a passive tool in a bilateral teleoperation scheme. To solve the challenging control problem of force regulation in contact interaction while maintaining flight stability and keeping the contact, we use a parallel position/force control method, commensurate to the system dynamics and constraints in which using the compliant structure of the end-effector the rotational degrees of freedom are also utilized to attain a broader range of feasible forces. In a bilateral teleoperation framework, the proposed control method regulates the aerial manipulator position in free flight and the applied force in contact interaction. On the master side, the human operator is provided with force haptic feedback to enhance his/her situational awareness. The validity of the theory and efficacy of the solution are shown by experimental results. This control architecture, integrated with a suitable perception/localization pipeline, could be used to perform outdoor aerial teleoperation tasks in hazardous and/or remote sites of interest. Keywords: aerial robotics; aerial manipulation; force control; bilateral teleoperation; haptics; quadrotor
Mohammadi, Mostafa, Davide Bicego, Antonio Franchi, Davide Barcelli, and Domenico Prattichizzo. 2021. "Aerial Tele-Manipulation with Passive Tool via Parallel Position/Force Control" Applied Sciences 11, no. 19: 8955.
Toward the end of March, when the COVID-19 pandemic hit hard in California, Universal Community Health Center in Los Angeles needed to implement a quick-and-easy platform to get telehealth off the ground.
The health center needed a simple solution that would enable its patients to communicate with the devices and the resources it had without the complexity of having to install an application or having to create any user names, said Dr. Edgar Chavez, founder and CEO of Universal Community Health Center.
Of all the platforms that Chavez reviewed, the one that would give the health center the ability to implement within a day and the simplicity to accommodate the patient population was Doxy.me. In one afternoon, he was able to set up Doxy.me with all the providers and support staff so they could engage in telehealth.
Training for staff took one day and for providers about one hour. It took about one week to enhance and adapt workflows to telehealth, but clinicians were able to do 60-70% of what they used to do in person using the telehealth platform.
There are many vendors of telemedicine technology and services on the health IT market today. Healthcare IT News recently compiled a comprehensive list of these vendors with detailed descriptions. To read this special report, click here.
With Doxy.me, Chavez and his team created a virtual protocol where the medical assistant sends the telehealth link to the patient and does a pre-visit evaluation that gathers information that normally would be taken in person. For a telehealth call, the medical assistant does the patient health questionnaire 9 (PHQ9), reconciles medications, and evaluates the need for health-maintenance items like vaccines, mammograms and colon-cancer screens.
But then everything changed. Earlier this year, Universal Community Health Center was awarded $170,479 for phones, laptops, mobile hotspots, network upgrades, remote-monitoring equipment and a telehealth platform to help the clinic transition to virtual care in response to the COVID-19 pandemic with a goal of conducting 80% of all visits using telehealth.
Early on in the COVID-19 pandemic, the health center decided it would, as much as possible, eliminate in-person visits, since this carried a huge risk of infection for staff. Even when the numbers of COVID-19 infections were decreasing, the health center still did not feel comfortable bringing a patient in, but it needed to do something that would get it to a safe place while still providing quality care.
The health center used the FCC grant to purchase a telehealth-assistive technology called Tytocare. Tytocare comes with an iPad, an otoscope, a stethoscope and a high-definition camera that allows a patient to do a physical exam with the guidance of a physician. From the safety of a socially distanced workspace within the health center, or even from home, the provider can be present in the exam room virtually and perform a physical exam while diminishing the chance of COVID-19 spread.
This special collection of stories, which will be updated throughout the month, explores how hospitals, health systems and physicians are attempting to not only financially survive, but thrive, under the new normal.
Teletext, or broadcast teletext, is a standard for displaying text and rudimentary graphics on suitably equipped television sets.[1][2] Teletext sends data in the broadcast signal, hidden in the invisible vertical blanking interval area at the top and bottom of the screen.[3] The teletext decoder in the television buffers this information as a series of "pages", each given a number. The user can display chosen pages using their remote control.In broad terms, it can be considered as Videotex, a system for the delivery of information to a user in a computer-like format,[4] typically displayed on a television or a dumb terminal,[5] but that designation is usually reserved for systems that provide bi-directional communication, such as Prestel or Minitel.
Teletext was created in the United Kingdom in the early 1970s by John Adams, Philips' lead designer for video display units to provide closed captioning to television shows for the hearing impaired.[6] Public teletext information services were introduced by major broadcasters in the UK,[7] starting with the BBC's Ceefax service in 1974.[8] It offered a range of text-based information, typically including news, weather and TV schedules. Similar systems were subsequently introduced by other television broadcasters in the UK and mainland Europe in the following years. Meanwhile, the UK's General Post Office introduced the Prestel system using the same display standards but run over telephone lines using bi-directional modems rather than the send-only system used with televisions.[9]
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