Cyber Life on Web 3.0

April 15, 2010

Listen To cyberstray

Filed under: Miscellaneous — ervega @ 2:10 pm

Listen To cyberstray

Posted using ShareThis

March 30, 2010

Technology Review: Blogs: arXiv blog: Gravity Emerges from Quantum Information, Say Physicists

Filed under: Miscellaneous — ervega @ 12:00 am

Technology Review: Blogs: arXiv blog: Gravity Emerges from Quantum Information, Say Physicists.

March 7, 2010

Heptagon – The CyberShaman Tribe

Filed under: Miscellaneous — ervega @ 6:02 pm

array2ab7f – The CyberShaman Tribe.

February 22, 2010

Run XP Mode on Windows 7 Machines Without Hardware Virtualization

Filed under: Miscellaneous — Tags: , , , — ervega @ 9:17 pm

One of the neatest new features in Windows 7 Professional and above is XP Mode, but not all machines are capable of running it. Today we show you how to use VMware to run XP Mode on machines without Hardware Virtualization.

How does this work?

Even if your computer doesn’t have hardware virtualization, you can still install XP Mode but just cannot run it as you can’t run Virtual PC. Enter VMware Player. This free program lets you create and run virtual machines, whether or not you have hardware virtualization. And, it can directly import XP Mode so you can use that copy of XP for free. A couple features are different, but it’s still a great replacement since you otherwise couldn’t use it at all.

Note: XP Mode does not work on Home Versions of Windows 7 and you’ll need VMware Player 3.0

Getting Started

This article was originally written on 02/17/10 Tagged with: Windows 7, Windows 7 Tips, XP

February 14, 2010

Google Calendar – Very Cool

Filed under: Miscellaneous — ervega @ 5:34 am

February 12, 2010

f | Cover

Filed under: Miscellaneous — ervega @ 2:00 am

f | Cover.

Feedly takes your feeds and makes them into a Magazine. It’s the best thing of this kind I have ever seen.

February 7, 2010

Why Boys Need Parents

Filed under: Miscellaneous — ervega @ 10:10 pm

Why boys need parents…








































February 5, 2010

BBC News – Cancer prevention campaign begins

Filed under: Miscellaneous — ervega @ 8:34 pm

Raspberries

BBC News – Cancer prevention campaign begins.

One in three people in Northern Ireland will develop cancer during their lifetime.

A year-long campaign aimed at increasing prevention of the disease has been launched by the Ulster Cancer Foundation (UCF).

The campaign ‘Cancer can be prevented too’ will educate local people on simple measures they can take to prevent cancer.

About 10,700 people are diagnosed with cancer every year in Northern Ireland.

Gerry McElwee of the UCF said most cancers could be prevented and by making lifestyle changes there could be a dramatic fall in cancer rates.

“Research shows that around two thirds of all cancers could be prevented if we stop smoking, avoid sunburn, eat a varied diet with plenty of fruit and vegetables, maintain a healthy weight and lead an active lifestyle,” he said.

“Diet alone has been linked to at least 35% of cancers so eating 5 portions of fruit and vegetables a day is a simple but very important health message,” he said.

“We all have the power to reduce our risk of cancer.”

UCF provides a range of interactive education programmes which include training, presentations and workshops to help local people adopt healthy, realistic strategies to help prevent cancer.

It also provides a free stop smoking service.

February 4, 2010

Blogging from Iphone

Filed under: Miscellaneous — Tags: — ervega @ 11:25 pm

Just a test

Have a Medical Question? Text a Group of Doctors

Filed under: Miscellaneous — Tags: , — ervega @ 7:43 pm

February 3, 2010, 5:45 pm
Have a Medical Question? Text a Group of Doctors
By CLAIRE CAIN MILLER

Patients, journalists, financial analysts, pharmaceutical executives and doctors could at times benefit from having a panel of physicians to whom they could pose questions. Truth On Call, a San Francisco start-up, assembles such a group virtually, by letting people text questions to physicians and then collecting the doctors’ responses.

The paid service, rolled out in January, is now open to members of the media, health care industry and financial firms. Truth On Call plans to offer the service to patients in a few months and, later on, to caregivers in developing countries who are seeking advice from doctors in the United States.

Those asking questions pay a minimum of $50 to ask one question of one doctor, though at this point it is only open to those who want to pose questions to large groups, because of the cost to the company.

Truth On Call taps into the phenomenon that differentiates Twitter from other online communication tools — the ability to ask a question of a broad, unknown audience and see what comes back. Some doctors, for example, have used Twitter to pose questions about a perplexing case and get responses from doctors they do not know.

“Information is being exchanged very, very quickly in people’s personal and professional lives, but health care has yet to tap into the feed,” said Rosina Samadani, who founded the company. “This is a way for folks to get answers from thousands of physicians within minutes or hours.”

Dr. Samadani — who has been a health care consultant for 12 years at McKinsey and Capella Advisors, a firm she started — hopes to eventually use Truth On Call to connect doctors in developing countries with those in the United States. Someone in rural India, for example, could get real-time advice about a patient from a group of doctors in the United States.

Doctors sign up to participate at Truth On Call’s Web site. The company verifies that the physician is registered with the federal database of doctors who can prescribe medicine and verifies identity by sending a text message to his or her cellphone. Doctors receive $10 for each question they answer, and Truth On Call will send the checks to their address or to a charity of their choosing.

Reporters have asked doctors about their views on the health care bill, for example, or queried neurosurgeons on whether they limit their own cellphone usage because of concern about effects on the brain.

A pharmaceutical company has asked gynecologists whether a competitor’s ad has affected which birth control pill they prescribe, and a financial firm considering an acquisition of a company that makes a gastroparesis drug asked intensive care doctors how pressing an issue gastroparesis was.

The fees for asking questions can quickly add up. Texting 100 doctors with a 24-hour response time costs $5,000, covering the doctors’ $10 fees plus text-messaging fees and payment to Truth On Call.

That might work for big companies, but it could make the service prohibitively expensive for patients to use, unless they ask questions of just a few doctors. Other tech start-ups have developed less expensive ways for patients to see doctors virtually. For example, American Well and UnitedHealth Group’s OptumHealth division offer 10-minute, one-on-one doctor visits over video chat for $45.

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