Monday, March 09, 2009

Obama's Plan to Digitize Medical Records Draws Criticism from Doctors [Healthcare]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/vfv37Dvq_C4/obamas-plan-to-digitize-medical-records-draws-criticism-from-doctors

Digitization of medical records is one of Obama's most prominent talking points: he claims modernizing records will save lives and billions of dollars at the same time. But some doctors aren't taken with the idea.

In a New York Times op-ed piece, Dr. Anne Armstrong-Coben expresses concern that the modernization of medical records may not be as obviously beneficial as it seems. For one thing, there's no unified system yet, and the likeliest candidate (Google Health) isn't subject to the now-outdated Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, the national privacy statute. Creating an easy-to-learn and effective system is a huge undertaking, from construction to installation to training, and not everybody is confident it can be done properly.

A buggy or confusing system could result in more mistakes, not less, as Dr. Armstrong-Coben points out. "I have seen how choosing the wrong box can lead to the wrong drug being prescribed," she writes. Older generations of doctors may have trouble adjusting to a totally digital system, and there are bound to be mistakes made by even the computer-savvy before digitization becomes ubiquitous.

On the other hand, Dr. Armstrong-Coben complains that full digitization may make the doctor-patient relationship less personal, a point not likely to hold much water with digitization proponents. The potential money and lives saved far outweigh the loss. She reminisces, "I loved how patients could participate in their own charts - illustrating their cognitive development as they went from showing me how they could draw a line at age 2 and a circle at 3 to proudly writing their names at 5." Unclear, however, is why she can't just keep a notebook in which her young pediatric patients can ! draw.

Obama's plan will cost about $100 billion, a huge chunk of the stimulus package, but some experts claim it will save two to three times that yearly. Those savings could go toward universal health care or simply flow back into the hospitals for better equipment.

Doctors like Armstrong-Coben bring up an interesting point: this is a new frontier and a massive project, and it won't be as simple as handing doctors a new iMac and watching the savings roll in. But it's a necessary step; just because it's going to be hard doesn't mean it's not worth the effort. [NY Times and CNN]



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Topps 3D Live Brings Augmented Reality to Baseball Cards [Augmented Reality]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/C4fH33txmzA/topps-3d-live-brings-augmented-reality-to-baseball-cards

After recently buying the venerable trading cards company, Disney is making a seriously cool bid to keep card collecting alive, debuting 3D, augmented reality baseball cards complete with tiny players, stats and games.

This kind of augmented reality tech has been seen before, most recently in a German Mini advert that placed a Mini Cabrio on a magazine, via a webcam. These cards (video here) take the concept a little bit further, with custom 3D models suited to each player and even a few little pitching, batting and catching games. The cards will be available in different editions in packs of either five or ten, for $1.00 or $2.00, respectively.

A rep for Upper Deck fired back, cryptically promising competing cards that "come alive and contain video." What this means, I have no idea, but at any rate it looks like baseball cards don't plan on dying quietly. Video at the source. [NYT]



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Thursday, March 05, 2009

Sigma's Flagship SD15 DSLR Feels Like a Rock (in a Good Way) [Tomorrow's Cameras]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/PcaxeHSkzPQ/sigmas-flagship-sd15-dslr-feels-like-a-rock-in-a-good-way

Sigma's upcoming 14-megapixel SD15 DSLR promises to improve on its SD14 predecessor with an improved True II image processor. On display at PMA, the camera feels damn near indestructable when you hold it in your hand.

This camera is clearly for those more professionally minded, and isn't smaller or lighter than some of its competitors. The dual dials up top seem a bit excessive considering there are still plenty of buttons on the back, but all in all, it feels good in your hand. And knowing the Foveon X3 sensor it's powered by, the images will more or less be decent as well.



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Wednesday, March 04, 2009

MSI Winki eyes-on: it's an instant-on OS, but for desktops

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/03/04/msi-winki-hands-on-its-an-instant-on-os-but-for-desktops/


MSI did a laudatory job this morning baffling us with its Winki release, but we managed to find an exceptionally kind, English-speaking representative at its CeBIT booth today who broke it down for us. In short, Winki is MSI's new instant-on operating system. It's Linux-based, and looks a heck of a lot more elaborate than the HyperSpace instant-on OS that we toyed with in January. The kicker is that at least for now, this thing is only for desktops, as it's actually built into a small module (shown above) that plugs directly into an MSI motherboard. At first, only select mainboards will come bundled with Winki, but it just might roll out across MSI's entire mobo line. The dame we spoke with wouldn't divulge any details on whether this OS would ever come to its wide-ranging laptop line, but we suspect it will in due time. Winki provides easy access to IM services, Skype and the internet, which is a shortcut to Doom away from being all the true gamer needs in life, anyway.

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MSI Winki eyes-on: it's an instant-on OS, but for desktops originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 04 Mar 2009 13:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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MSI Wind U123 netbook hands-on

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2009/03/04/msi-wind-u123-netbook-hands-on/


While MSI's X-Slim line no doubt garnered the most attention at its massive CeBIT booth, we found a few other gems that our camera just couldn't ignore. Take the Wind U123 for instance -- which was camped out with a Intel N280 processor, the incredibly aged GMA 950 graphics set, the old 945GSE chipset (as opposed to the GN40, which we were carelessly hoping for) and a SIM card slot for 3G WWAN. It didn't look all that different from U120, but then again, we never expected it to. Dive in below to see for yourself.

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MSI Wind U123 netbook hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 04 Mar 2009 15:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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