Personal safety app WanderSafe teams up What3words

CLIENT: WANDERSAFE
OUTLET: NEWS.COM.AU

A revolutionary app that is saving lives with just three words is teaming up with an Australian company to create a “formidable” personal safety system.

What3words, which can pinpoint a person’s exact location to three square metres anywhere on the planet with a simple three-word code, is integrating its technology with WanderSafe, an app and “SOS” beacon designed to help vulnerable people avoid and escape dangerous situations.

“I attended a safety briefing in Canberra for women with disabilities two weeks ago and there was a woman at the end of the presentation who said to me, ‘You’ve saved three of my friends’ lives,’” said WanderSafe founder Stephenie Rodriguez. “I burst into tears.”

Put Down The Hand Sanitiser: Here's How To Wash Your Hands Instead

CLIENT: DR ZAC TURNER
OUTLET: 10 DAILY

Hand sanitiser is considered the Holy Grail of portable hygiene, but new research has found it may not be as effective as people think.

Simply slapping on hand sanitiser is not going to kill the germs on your hand, according to GP, Dr Zac Turner.

"The way that hand sanitiser actually kills off the germs is that it evaporates, and it is the evaporation that kills a lot of the germs," he told 10 daily.

Melbourne Restaurants Are Taking A Stand Against Uber Eats

CLIENT: CHAPEL STREET PRECINCT ASSOCIATION
OUTLET: KIIS FM

Some of Melbourne’s favourite restaurants are turning their back on food delivery services due to crippling costs and health risks.

The once vibrant Chapel Street is now littered with ‘For Lease’ signs as pedestrian traffic slows down.

One of Australia's top restaurant strips moves to tackle delivery services like Uber Eats and Deliveroo to save industry

CLIENT: CHAPEL STREET PRECINCT ASSOCIATION
OUTLET: THE DAILY MAIL

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One of Australia's most thriving restaurant strips is on a mission to stop consumers using big delivery services such as Uber Eats and Deliveroo.

A string of restaurants belonging to the Chapel Street Precinct Association, along with the Stonnington Council, say delivery services are haemorrhaging revenue and lowering the quality of food.

‘A lot of these businesses are actually losing money by being apart of Uber Eats,' Chapel Street General Manager Chrissie Maus said.