She aims to support doctors in incorporating genetic analysis and customized nutrition into their practices. She highlights that SNPs can determine various characteristics, such as eye color or skin tone, and by analyzing these SNPs, SNiP Nutrigenomics identifies an individual's specific genetic blueprint and determines the nutrients they require. Ressler also talks about how her core mission is to increase awareness of the importance of personalized nutrition and prevention. Ressler also goes on to explain that the use of ”SNiP” in the name of the company refers to single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), which are genetic variants that influence functions in the body. Thus she created SNiP Nutrigenomics, which aims to simplify the process by focusing on key areas of the body and providing a single supplement that addresses an individual's specific genetic profile, thereby saving time and simplifying supplementation. Having worked in the field for the past five years, she shares how she recognized the complexity and cost involved in genetic mapping. Ressler starts off by sharing her own personal journey that led her to work in the field of nutrigenomics, explaining that her health struggles motivated her to explore the connection between genetics and nutrition. In today’s episode of the Brains Byte Back podcast, we speak with Kim Ressler, Founder and CEO of SNiP Nutrigenomics, a company custom-creating supplements based on your body's unique genetic code, making it easier for you to absorb and utilize essential nutrients. Opera has a new Android Web browser in the works, which its will demonstrate later this month at Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona. Opera has already submitted its first set of patches to the WebKit and Chromium projects. Google Chrome is derived from the Chromium project, to which Google has added some extra functionality and features (if that makes sense?).īy halting development on its own rendering engine and contributing, along with other browser experts, to said open-source projects, Opera’s CTO, Håkon Wium Lie, hopes that more resources “can be dedicated to developing new features and the user-friendly solutions that can be expected from a company that invented so many of the features that are today being used by everyone in the browser industry.” WebKit powers Apple Safari and Google Chrome browsers, amongst others, and is well-known for its standards compliance and performance. Opera also announced that it will make a gradual transition to the open-source WebKit rendering engine this year, as well as the open-source Chromium Web browser. As Opera CEO Lars Boilesen describes, mobile is something that the company intends to concentrate on going forward “we are shifting into the next gear to claim a bigger piece of the pie in the smartphone market.” Most of this growth stems from mobile where Opera is ranked third highest behind the default Android browser and mobile Safari on iOS, according to StatCounter. Opera develops a range of Internet browsers across desktop, tablet, TV, and mobile, and today announced that it had reached the 300 million monthly milestone – no mean feat in today’s highly competitive browser market. Big changes are afoot at Opera – the alternative Internet browser software developer – as the Norwegian company announced its “fastest acceleration in user growth” in recent times to 300 million monthly users, and the beginning of a transition to the WebKit layout engine.
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