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  • New Intel app aims to prevent hot car deaths

    On average, 38 children die in hot cars each year in the U.S. To try to lower those numbers, Intel has developed a device to send an alert to your smart phone to warn you if you have left your child in your car. The Intel Smart Clip attaches to your child's car seat harness and can warn you when conditions in the car are potentially dangerous and the harness is fastened. The high-tech clip is swapped with the one already on your child's car seat.

  • Tributes flow for toddler killed in grandma’s driveway

    Tributes are flowing for 15-month-old Braxton James Nowlan, the Ipswich toddler who tragically died on Monday after being run over in his grandmother’s driveway. The toddler was apparently living at his grandmother’s home at the time.

  • Voxx sensor tech tethers you via Bluetooth to your car's baby seat

    Children aren't usually the focus of the CES technology conference, but during a private presentation held by Voxx in Las Vegas last week, company CEO Tom Malone introduced a potentially life-saving car accessory.

  • The Doctors demonstrate resqme™ emergency tool

    The Doctors demonstrate the resqme™ emergency tool breaking a car window. This life-saving tool is a window breaker and seat belt cutter and an essential safety item for all drivers.

  • Who can stop hot car deaths?

    While the case of the Georgia father accused of intentionally leaving his toddler son to die in a hot car continues to grip the nation, it has also sparked a debate about whether more could be done to prevent the accidental deaths of children from heatstroke inside a car. Is it an issue for the automakers to tackle voluntarily? Should the federal government mandate a driver-reminder alert?

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