It was three in the morning when Dr. Lena Varga’s phone buzzed with the specific tone she reserved for the zoo. A young male chimpanzee named Kivu had stopped eating and was rocking rhythmically in his enclosure—a behavior his keepers had never seen before.
That is a fascinating area with a lot of potential for practical tech. To narrow things down, we could focus on a tool that helps pet owners or clinicians bridge the gap between observation and diagnosis. Here are three distinct directions we could take: zooskool+simone+first+cut+exclusive
"He isn't angry," Aris whispered to a young intern. "He’s still in the basement. His brain is convinced the floor is still falling." It was three in the morning when Dr