I knew this would be here one day when I first saw a big one in medical school and here (NYT free registration required) it is: “Despite its compact components, the iLook works like any other ultrasound machine. It transmits high-frequency sound waves through the body with a probe placed on the skin. The device calculates the speed of the sound waves’ echoes and constructs real-time diagnostic images of structures inside the body.”
Cyberspace Policy Institue: Interest in Conference?
Dr. Nicolas Guzman mailto:guzmann@gwu.edu writes: “The Cyberspace Policy Institute of The George Washington University, in collaboration with the US Department of the Navy, the General Services Administration, and other sponsors TBA is planning to hold a 3-day conference on Open Source in March 2003 in Washington, DC. I am trying to determine the level of interest that exists among this group and others in participating before I formalize my request for space and time allocation.” The full text of the message including contact info follows. E-mail Dr. Guzman if interested.
—–Original Message—–
From: Nicolas Guzman [mailto:guzmann@gwu.edu]
Sent: Friday, September 20, 2002 3:23 AM
To: openhealth-list@minoru-development.com
Subject: Call for Participation (preliminary) – Open Source Conference,
March 2003 – Washington, DC
Hello everyone,
As one of the organizers of the following planned event I am trying to determine the level of interest that exists among this group and others in participating before I formalize my request for space and time allocation.
The Cyberspace Policy Institute of The George Washington University, in collaboration with the US Department of the Navy, the General Services Administration, and other sponsors TBA is planning to hold a 3-day conference on Open Source in March 2003 in Washington, DC.
The aim of the conference is the presentation of best practices, awareness raising, and the sharing of experiences among policy makers, donors, developers, users/consumers, universities, and industry specialists in Open Source, e-Government and related fields.
We plan to have a 1/2 to 1 full day session (depending on the level of interest for participation) on “Open Source Software and Open Standards in e-Health”. The format is still to be determined but I anticipate it to include individual presentations and panel discussions in addition to demonstration projects.
As I said before, I need to have an idea of the level of interest in participating/attending the conference so I can start bargaining for appropriate time/space.
Please respond to my office address: < guzmann@gwu.edu if you have an interest in participating. I also welcome any discussion, comments, suggestions, ideas which you would like to post to the list so we can discuss them with other members. Many thanks. Nick -- Nicolas J. Guzman, M.D. Associate Professor of Medicine Director, Diabetes and Kidney Care Program Member - MFA Physician Advisory Group for Healthcare Informatics Co-Chairman - Multi-Channel Delivery of Health Information Universal Access Working Group Federal Architecture and Infrastructure Committee - CIO Council The George Washington University Medical Faculty Associates 2150 Pennsylvania Ave., NW, ACC 4-425 Washington, DC 20037 Phone: (202) 741-2283 Direct: (202) 741-2291 Fax: (202) 741-2285 E-mail: guzmann@gwu.edu
The Case for e-Government
“Open Source: A Case for e-Government” conference will be held in Washington, DC, USA, October
16 – 18, 2002. The aim of the conference is to raise awareness and to share experiences among policy makers, donors, users/consumers, universities, and industry specialists in Open Source, e-Government and related fields. The conference will draw participants from local, national and international organizations from both the public and private sector.” Full text of the announcement is within.
Open Source: A Case for e-Government
Washington, DC
October 16 – 18, 2002
October 16, 2002 Marvin Center George Washington University Grand Ballroom
800 21st St. NW (on the corner of 21st and H Sts. NW)
October 17 and October 18, 2002 The World Bank IFC Auditorium
2121 Pennsylvania Avenue
The Information for Development program (infoDev) of the World Bank, the
Cyberspace Policy Institute of The George Washington University, and the
Sustainable Development Networking Programme of the United Nations
Development Program are pleased to invite you to a conference on “Open
Source: A Case for e-Government” to be held in Washington, DC, USA, October
16 – 18, 2002. The aim of the conference is to raise awareness and to share
experiences among policy makers, donors, users/consumers, universities, and
industry specialists in Open Source, e-Government and related fields. The
conference will draw participants from local, national and international
organizations from both the public and private sector.
The core sessions of the conference will focus on:
� Keynote by Congressman Rick Boucher, co-founder of the Congressional
Internet Caucus
� Open Source and e-Government in the U.S., Europe and developing
countries (how governments and local authorities are benefiting from using
Open Source)
� Open Source vs. Proprietary Software (what is the proper role of each
in e-Government)
� Demonstrations of Open Source Projects (LinuxTM, OpenOffice,
MozillaTM, GNOME, MySQL)
� Meet the Open Source Vendors
� Open Source and the Security of the Critical Infrastructure
� Business Cases: The Economics of Using Open Source Software and Total
Cost of Ownership
Please visit the website http://www.egovos.org for further information. As this is an invitation only event, you must be registered to attend. You may
register online by visiting the conference website and kindly note that all
registrations must be received no later than October 11, 2002. There is no
registration cost for the event.
We hope that you will join us for what promises to be an exciting event.
Please complete the registration form as per the instructions in the
conference website. Feel free to contact us in the case of any questions or
concerns at (202) 994-5513.
New open source medical software?
This project [CARE 2002]is new to me. It seems well advanced
with a lot of function, a nice interface and active
development. Billing is currently in development.
Once that is done it looks like a competition killer
to me.
Apps Make Redhat Ready for Prime Time
With this past week’s release of Version 8.0 of
Redhat GNU/Linux,
it is time to ask the perennial question: is GNU/Linux ready
for the desktop? Is it finally here? Is there a compelling
reason to use it on the desktop now? Despite some rough
edges in RH 8.0, such as a somewhat disorganized menu system, the
answer is yes. However, the reason may
surprise you.
Redhat 8.0 is a huge stride toward usability on
the desktop. It fills major holes of the ‘have to
go to the command line’ kind. For example, the
display settings screen is now GUI and the
Add/Remove Packages GUI program is very,
very good.
However, these are merely catching up with what
other operating systems have had for years. What
would make a user use it for its merits alone?
History has taught us that the short answer is
applications.
One can go back to the the computer
industry in 1989 for parallels. At the time the
underdog was Microsoft, the 800 pound gorilla
was IBM, and the dark horse was Apple. IBM and
Microsoft were jointly developing an operating
system called OS/2 which had a graphic user
interface(GUI). However, the OS was late, overpriced ($800!) and had no applications to speak of. Its predecessor, Microsoft DOS, was long in the tooth and had no graphic user interface. Microsoft desperately needed to ship a competitive OS with a GUI to fend off Apple. MS responded with Windows 3.0 which had an acceptable GUI, was priced right (about $90) and importantly, had a bunch of little but useful business applications already built in that justified its cost. For example, the calculator program alone made purchase of a stand-alone calculator un-necessary, which very much passed the ‘justify it to your boss’ test.
History may be repeating itself. In my freshly
installed Redhat 8.0 I spied
two little applications off
of the ‘Office’ menu: ‘Diagrams’ and ‘Project
Management’.
Mr. Project and Dia
are nice to have, and two applications that
are definitely add-ons for other operating
systems.
GNU/Linux distributions have always come
with a plethora of
useful applications. But many of them merely
matched those available out of box from other
vendors. Dia and Mr. Project are different. They add serious ‘justify to your boss’ potential.
The fact that you get these useful applications out of the box with Linux adds an amazing amount of value to this OS. It really is a Swiss army chainsaw because many people won’t shell out a minimum of $58 (pricewatch.com) for a certain well
known project management software. They’ll either
do without, or just bastardized a spreadsheet to do the same thing in an inferior way.
With Redhat GNU/Linux 8.0 and no doubt other
Linux distributions like SuSe, Mandrake and Debian sporting a sharp, mature GUI, it is ready to take its place alongside other operating systems. More importantly, it now includes some productivity applications that are add-ons for other operating systems and may pass the boss test. An important milestone has been reached.
OpenEvidence: EU finances an Open Source project
The EU is very active in supporting Open Source
development by providing financial aids to European
projects of interest, like OpenEvidence that
was approved to be realized by a consortium of technology providers and users from 4 countries: Belgium, France, Italy and Estonia.
In this contest C&A is very proud to announce its OpenEvidence participation, integrating its Time Stamping technology, to this ‘evidence creation and validation system’ of electronic documents and activities.
The technology developed by the project can be used as basic building blocks to support such services as non-repudiation of electronic business transactions, property right protection and notarisation.
Implementations and demonstration services using the protocols defined in RFC 3029 (DVCS) and RFC 3161 (TSP) will be provided as initial activity.
A version of time stamping service can be also be tested on the C&A web site.
To learn more about OpenEvidence:
http://www.com-and.com/openevidence.html
Medical Claim Clearinging Houses?
I need to get list of clearing houses. We have software to bill medical claims but I need a clearing house that still does less than 1.00 per claim. Can anyone help?
Sun’s open desktop client as hospital terminals?
Many applications used to access medical
records and lab results are now web based.
This removes the need to have expensive, less-reliable and less-secure
MS clients to access information. An open source, low
cost, reliable client that is backed by a big
player is may be whats required.
Can the new Sun Open desktop fit the bill?
This lwn.net article states: “Combining world-class Java Card authentication with an open source desktop software stack and off-the-shelf hardware, we can deliver military-grade security with profound savings in acquisition and operational costs…”
“The new solution brings together off-the-shelf hardware, open-source software and Sun’s own industry-leading intellectual property. These include low-cost desktop systems hardware and several open source software efforts, namely Linux, Mozilla, OpenOffice, Evolution and GNOME.”
“The total system solution is expected to be available in 2003 with prototype systems available soon at Sun’s worldwide iForce centers. “We want customers, ISVs, OEMs and channel partners to have the conversation with us about how much they can save and facilitate their migration to this much needed alternative environment,” said Schwartz.”
PatientUpdates.org
Interesting story in the St. Petersburg Times about PatientUpdates.org a free web site for posting updates about a patients status: ‘…Use the Internet to post updates that friends and families could check from anywhere. The result is PatientUpdates.org, a free Web site where people can post messages about sick or injured relatives…’
DFW.com: Simulators Getting Real
The DFW Star-Telegram is reporting on how medical simulators are getting better: ‘…”If you can train health care workers in a realistic situation where they can make mistakes, nobody dies, and they learn the lesson, that will have tremendous implications for medical education and medical care,” says Dr. Donald Baim, an interventional cardiologist and director of the Center for Integration of Medicine and Innovative Technology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital…’