Iphoneloca

About

Username
Iphoneloca
Joined
Visits
6
Last Active
Roles
member
Points
7
Badges
0
Posts
6
  • Apple aiming for immaculate images in AR glasses & VR headset

    OOOOhh eye candy-- !  (You saw what I did there....)  To quote the ever awesome Phil, "Can't innovate anymore, my ass," 
    cy_starkmanwatto_cobra
  • Boston Children's Hospital's Dock Health app reduces doctor paperwork, exclusive to Apple ...

    Oh God, give the doctors Apple-centric software running on Apple hardware, please!  I retired from the practice of emergency medicine two years ago, after a decade of hoping that I could eventually create documentation on decent software programs, running on Apple hardware. Alas, it was not to be. One of the factors in my retirement was my disgust at  having to do a second shift of data entry after each shift of patient care. Doctors, you should only have one job. Demand the best.
    watto_cobrajony0
  • Alleged 'iPhone 7' schematics hint at mic instead of second speaker

     Any chance that with another mic, the iPhone might become a little bit more like Amazon's echo? I would love to talk to Siri from across the room, but she's not quite a Goodnuf listener. 
    levicali
  • Rumor: Apple working on entirely new, advanced health-tracking hardware for 2017 launch

    Okay, guys.  Take it from a (real) MD.  What is the first thing that goes on your wrist when you enter a hospital, or even an ER?  A .... wait for it... bracelet.  But all it does is identify you to avoid medication and lab errors.  It's a dumb hospital bracelet. 

    In the ICU there are complicated, bulky, uncomfortable and expensive machines that take your blood pressure every 2 minutes, (or with a catheter inside an artery, continuously).  Monitors attached by leads to your chest read out your pulse, but not only a number-- a waveform that has meaning on its own.  There is a continuous oxygen saturation monitor on your fingertip or sometimes toe.  To get your blood sugar, though, a nurse still has to show up with a nasty lancet-containing machine and a hand held device that gives a digital readout.  And temperatures are still taken only every few hours.  Electrolytes might be checked daily by a phlebotomist who shows up at 5 AM so that your readings are ready by 7 or 8 for the doc, slightly more frequently if you are critically ill.  

    On the medical and surgical wards themselves, much of this data is collected only every 8 hours, by nursing personnel that go from bed to bed the old fashioned way.  Good luck with that if you take a sudden turn for the worse and it takes someone 8 hours to figure it out.   

    Does all this sound like an expensive, uncomfortable and often inadequate system to do something that Apple likely can do --with a small, elegant, reliable system that will read out the essential parameters continuously,  to a central monitoring desk that will alarm when abnormal conditions occur, allowing prompt intervention and racking up the lives saved?  Yeah, to me too.  

    We've been waiting for a while for the smart hospital bracelet.  I think we know where it's coming from .

    From Steve's sister's eulogy:  

    "Intubated, when he couldn’t talk, he asked for a notepad. He sketched devices to hold an iPad in a hospital bed. He designed new fluid monitors and x-ray equipment. He redrew that not-quite-special-enough hospital unit. And every time his wife walked into the room, I watched his smile remake itself on his face.

    For the really big, big things, you have to trust me, he wrote on his sketchpad. He looked up. You have to."

    I'm ready to trust Steve and the company he left behind to change the world.  I always have been.  

    kevin keefastasleepbadmonkjahaja