-- Inside a non-descript building in the northern suburbs, you'll find a pop of color headed far away from here.
"There was an airline crash and instead of training people the first day like I was supposed to, we spent 14 or 15 hours X-raying plane crash victims," Cairnie said. The Northbrook company MinXray takes its x-ray equipment around to world to train others and detect disease. Here is the equipment in action in Uganda.Swears words because MinXray's latest gadget runs on battery, is handheld and weighs less than 15 pounds. Like TV news cameras, the technology is getting smaller, lighter and more advanced. Some versions of the new MinXray machine even come with artificial intelligence to analyze X-rays for you.