The current way health records are maintained and shared is fundamentally flawed. Health records are maintained and shared by many companies and individuals, except by the person whose data is contained in them. This post explores the issues and possible models around managing and sharing health records while maintaining a patients privacy.
Last month I wrote a post for the Breaking Development Blog titled Beyond the Desktop. In this article, I discussed characteristics of this new design such as post-touch and snackable content. I summarized the pattern that I felt framed the future beyond simple RWD. It turns out I wasn’t the only one thinking about these things.
I was a heavy Delicious user when Yahoo leaked that they were going to shut it down. Instead, they sold it off. While it still exists, it is a hollow shell of it’s former self. At the time I was pretty devastated. But I recovered by basically migrating most of what I use to Google.
I have actually been quite a Google cheerleader, but recent events have ruined that for me.
Facebook’s recent Graph Search announcement has left many pundits yawning. To be honest, I am uncertain if Facebook can do anything to get the pundits excited. It seems that Facebook it the social network site (SNS) that everyone uses yet everyone loves to criticize. But I think the pundits are wrong about Graph Search and they simply don’t have the vision to see where this is going to take us.
Supporting the Open Graph Protocol (OGP) is important if you care how a page is displayed in a Social Networking Site (SNS) like one of the big three Facebook, Google+, or Twitter. But if you are a content site, it is crucial. To illustrate, here are examples of pages that do not have OGP implemented: […]
The tech pundits keep making comparisons between Siri and Google Now. The problem is that this is almost the same as comparing cars to planes based solely on the fact that they both get you from point A to B. Google Now, at least for the moment, is really not a lot more than Google […]