Sunday, December 27, 2009

The Exhaustive Guide to Apple Tablet Rumors - apple islate - Gizmodo

There could well be 3G connectivity in the forthcoming iSlate from Apple. Why do I say that? Here's my logic:
1. Announcing in January with availability to follow a few months later fits with requiring the device to go through FCC approval. Announcing before the submission puts Apple in control of the announcement rather than risk leaks from the FCC.
2. If it didn't have cellular capability then it would be just like a MacBook or iPod Touch and you would expect Apple to announce and ship simultaneously, or at worst case with just a few weeks delay.
3. Adding a 3G modem allows Apple to distribute through the wireless carriers. It could fit with releasing to Verizon on their new LTE network. The iSlate is not an iPhone and hence doesn't violate the AT&T exclusivity agreement in the USA.
4. Distributing through one or more wireless carriers allows Apple to get the price subsidized. Remember, the 32GB iPhone 3GS is a $699 phone, like many other smartphones - when you buy it without a contract.

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Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Real or Online - The Personas differ

Thanks to @stoweboyd for linking to this MIT Personas experiment on his /Message blog

I tried running the persona exercise for my real name and my twitter username. The results differ. Not surprisingly.

These are the results for @StoweBoyd and Stowe Boyd:

Does this give us more insight in to our differing personas?

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How does your Persona shape up on the Internet?

I also ran the same process (see my previous post) for my online persona:

Monday, December 14, 2009

Give Me My Health Data

Today I have been reading a couple of great blog posts that nicely complement each other. The first was from Gilles Frydman (@gfry) over on e-patients.net "2010: The year of Open Streams and Fax Machines" Gilles makes a number of great points and pulls some fascinating quotes from Adam Bosworth at Keas. Go and read the article - Now!

The second article was from one of my favorite firestarters - Jen McCabe  (@jensmcCabe)at ContagionHealth: "Why Programming Microchoice and Microcontrol in the Healthcare system Will Lead to the Equivalent of the Microprocessing Revolution." The title may be a mouthful but the article is a "must read."  There is so much packed in to Jen's post. The bottom line is that we (each of us) already exercises control in our own lives through the microchoices we make every day, many times a day. In the healthcare system today our primary mechanism to exercise control over our own destiny is the "null decision." We can choose not to take medication, or refuse a surgery. All very negative, but still a form of control we can exercise. 

The revolution coming in healthcare will be when we each choose to engage in our own health.

In Gilles' article he refers to the Declaration of Health Data Rights. If you haven't signed this  go and do it right now. It is a simple thing to do and can take less than a minute. It is an example of a positive microchoice you can make in taking control of your own health.

I have recently had to find a new doctor and dentist. Always a fun process that reaffirms the primitive tools available to healthcare consumers. It also confirms Gilles' point that the Healthcare system is wedded to paper. However, there is an opportunity here:

When you sign up at a healthcare provider you typically receive a "Notice of Privacy Practices" document that tells you how they are going to use your health information. There is often a section like this one:

Your Authorization: In addition to our use of your health information for treatment, payment or healthcare operations, you may give us written authorization to use your health information or to disclose it to anyone for any purpose. If you give us a authorization, you may revoke it in writing at any time. Your revocation will not affect any use or disclosures permitted by your authorization while it was in effect. Unless you give us a written authorization, we cannot use or disclose your health information for any reason except those described in this notice.

Let's use this clause to free our health data! To this end, I have drafted a crude counter document. After all, if a HealthCare provider is going to bombard us with documents to sign let's give them something back in return! 

Here is the Google Doc - Authorization to Disclose Health Information - does one of our Health Privacy Lawyers want to come up with a better document? I am open to improvements. Think of this as Health Data Rights in practice.

Let's make it clear that we expect the information from our Doctor visits and lab results to be uploaded to our Personal Health Record. So when you go to the Doctor's office take along two copies of the Authorization document. Get them to complete the form and provide you with a copy. You can then use a platform like nomoreclipboard.com or Google Health to grant the Doctor's office access to update your Health Record.

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Saturday, December 12, 2009

Social Media Power - #TedxSV is on now

One of the most powerful things about TEDxSV that is going on live in Silicon Valley is the realization of the power of Social Media.

The stream is on Twitter using the hashtag: #tedxsv

I am sitting here watching a live broadcast from TEDxSV via uStream along with nearly 1,000 other people. If you question the future of Television, as I do, then you realize that the power to broadcast is now in the hands of the consumer.

The major TV channels do have the power of captive audiences but the recent move in the USA to digital broadcasting potentially created a strategic disruption that is causing consumers to look at alternatives to the traditional over the air, cable or satellite delivered programming. 

Yes, the Internet is the future of broadcasting. We can expect a mix of live and on-demand content from a seemingly infinite cache. At Le Web this week it was pointed out that users are uploading 24 hours of video to YouTube EVERY MINUTE!

Great content will still rule the day but the barriers to creating and more importantly distributing that content keep coming down. More than anything this is one of the big messages I am taking away from watching the live uStream from TEDxSV. We have the power to make change happen. This message keeps being driven home for me when I look back at the past 18 months and the grass roots movement that is HealthCamp

HealthCamp has grown through the power of Social Media. This is a quick video highlighting how this happened:

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Wednesday, December 09, 2009

Offline Gmail comes out of the labs

Read Write Web has an in-depth article on Offline Gmail. Apparently Gmail with Gears (Google's offline technology) has just emerged from Google Labs and is now available to all users. 

In the article Sarah Perez asks the question why Google bothered when they have also stated that they are abandoning Gears 2 development and focusing on using the offline features that are being baked in to the HTML5 specifications.

Sarah, I have an answer to your question of "Why bother?" 

Google is in a battle with Microsoft and is continually pushing the Google Apps suite as an alternative to Microsoft Office and Microsoft Exchange. Google keeps adding capabilities to the Google Apps offering. In fact Alex Williams at Read Write Web reported on "Google adding Google Groups to the Apps suite." It is moves like this that make it obvious why Google is pushing ahead with Gmail with Google Gears and not waiting for HTML5 ratification.

Enterprises are notoriously slow to move. This has worked to Microsoft's advantage for years. I can attest to this - at work it is only in the middle of 2009 that our company moved from IE6 to IE7. Despite IE8 now being available. 

Email is the life blood of many companies. How many readers live and die by access to their email on their Blackberry? One of the big differences between Google and Microsoft is that Outlook can happily work in an offline mode. Google needs a similar capability. One that doesn't depend upon Microsoft Outlook and IMAP or an Exchange Connector. Delivering Gmail with Gears allows Google to offer Gmail in the browser with offline support. The beauty of the browser-based app is that Google will be able to seamlessly switch out Gears for HTML5 based upon the detection of which browser model a user is working with.

By releasing Gears Google can offer offline Gmail as part of the Google Apps for Enterprises even if those enterprise customers have been slow to upgrade to current releases of their preferred browser. Other tricks that Google have demonstrated that allow Google tools to run inside Microsoft browsers just serve to confirm Google's thinking about removing the barriers to adoption of their products.

So there you have it. Google is releasing Gears in Gmail to allow Enterprise users to use Gmail offline, even if they are still running an antiquated or non=standard compliant browser and adoption of Google Apps for Enterprises is no longer tied to the ratification, and more importantly the slow adoption of the standard. Microsoft can drag its feet on HTML5 compliance in IE9 or IE10 and even if enterprises are slow to adopt IE7, IE8 or IE9 Google can still deliver an offline solution.

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Text v Voice caught from @stoweboyd /Message

December 09, 2009

Text messages now outnumber mobile voice calls three to one, according to the Nielsen Company.

via www.nytimes.com

07:53 AM | Permalink

Fascinating Stat that @stoweboyd picked up on.

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Saturday, December 05, 2009

One reason for getting healthcare spending under control

With healthcare representing around
20% of the us economy but health inflation rising at around 15% we have to make changes. The status quo is unaffordable.

Mark Scrimshire
B: http://ekive.blogspot.com
....Sent from my iPhone

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Battling Sharepoint

This Saturday has sharepointsaturday happening in Reston, Va. Unfortunately I can't be at the event. I could certainly use the inside knowledge of sharepoint since I find myself regularly battling with sharepoint.

The challenge I usually find myself facing is that the Sharepoint installation I am working with is a more or less vanilla out of the box installation. The business data catalog is unpopulated and the only additional web parts are a couple of silverlight charting tools that come with no documentation. Additional complications are the limited rights I receive as a site administrator. This means any customization has to use the standard componenents and anything I can accomplish as a non-programmer using sharepoint designer 2007. This can be a frustrating experience because you find that a technique that works on a list doesn't work on a diiferent library. Hee is an example...

I can successfully use designer to modify the newform, editform or display form for a list but if I do the sane trick on a photo library designer complains. The general approach here is to take a copy of the original form. Delete the list form web part and then insert a new custom list form. This populates the fields from the list which can then be edited to remove fields you don't want to display or change the fields from editable to display. When you save the form you can go to the properties for the list and change the default display, new or edit forms in the supporting files tab.

In typical inconsistent sharepoint fashion this works for a list but fails for a wiki or photo library. It is these inconsistencies in how sharepoint works that makes the learning curve so difficult to ascend.

My latest adventure is to attempt to provide a voting feature in a photo library. I found that I was unable to change the default editform for the picture library in order to hide a couple of fields. I yherfore had to resort to other devious means.

Deviousness - essential for dealing with SharePoint

I modified the picture library to add a MyVote field. I made this a choice field
In Digg style. The default is a zero vote, the other options are +1 or -1.

I then created a votes custom list. This has the following fields:
- title
- votes tally
- voters
- source list
- source id
- source ref (the source list and source id fields concatenated with a colon)

I then wrote a workflow that works when the photo library is edited

The workflow checks if the vote field has been changed. It creates a record in the votes list if one doesn't exist. It checks if the person modifying the photo record has already recorded a vote for this record by looking for the username in the voters field. It this is a valid vote it adds the +1 or -1 vote to the vote tally fieldand resets the myvote field in the photo record to zero ready for the next vote.

The other little tweak was to embed a thumbnail link to the original image in the vote record.

This is all working now after trying various alternate approaches. The next challenge is to create a view from the photo library that can allow a user to select an image and call up a custom edit pagefor the photo library that only has the myvote field as an editable field. I will have to let you know how that challenge works out.

(tags: sharepoint)

Mark Scrimshire
B: http://ekive.blogspot.com
....Sent from my iPhone

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Wednesday, December 02, 2009

Photos from #secretDCHealthCamp

#SecretDCHC took place on Tuesday December 1st. The objective was to start organizing big things for 2010.

#getupandmove

I love Keas - They are always so responsive to feedback.

I made a comment today on the Preventive Health section:

And before I know it there is an email from Keas Support:

Hi Mark,

Thanks for the great share regarding getupandmove.me!

Best,

This is a company that is really listening to their users.

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