Category Archives: Business

IBM Donates Portion of Blue Spruce Code: Enables Smarter Healthcare Solutions

Open source enables large distributed science projects in a way that closed, proprietary software never will– here is some interesting news from IBM:

ARMONK, N.Y. – October 3,2011 -IBM (NYSE:IBM) today announced that the company is donating a portion of its Blue Spruce Project code to the Dojo Foundation’s Open Cooperative Web Framework (OpenCoweb). The Blue Spruce technology, which was developed in the IBM labs, enables real-time cooperative web solutions.

It is already being utilized in an online data exploration system for the National Institutes of Health (NIH) funded study of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPDGeneR), and to create customized solutions for the healthcare industry by iTel Companies, Inc.

With the code donation to the OpenCoweb Framework, developers can build new solutions that allow concurrent real-time interactions between remote users and external data sources such as a co-authoring editor. The OpenCoweb Framework is built on web Standards and consists of JavaScript libraries. The libraries serve as building blocks for Web application developers to design custom solutions for a variety of industries such as custom imaging applications for healthcare or collaborative investment portfolios for the finance industry.

The OpenCoweb Framework is a key component of the system utilized by COPDGeneR investigators, correlating clinic and medical imaging findings to increase understanding of the disease processes and the underlying genetic factors. COPDGeneR collaborators from around the globe can review and compare the clinical data and CT scan images of more than 10,000 individuals. The system provides access to selected cases in real-time. Through graphic representations, the investigators are able to study outlying cases and select cases for further study in order to identify the features and genetic factors that influence the development of specific abnormalities seen in patients with COPD. The cooperative web methodology of the Framework increases the data available to researchers and provides tools for data analysis. This has decreased repetitive requests for the same raw data from multiple individuals and opens new possibilities for data mining by the researchers.

“The online system we’ve been using on the COPDGene patients is exciting and extremely impressive,” said James D. Crapo, MD and COPDGene Executive Committee Member. “With the online collaboration capabilities we now have at our fingertips, we’re in constant communication and are uncovering key trends that will help us to better understand the disease.”

The code that was donated to the OpenCoweb Framework is part of IBM’s Project Blue Spruce. Project Blue Spruce allows people to simultaneously interact and update content in real-time via a web browser on computers and the Apple iPad and includes video chat. For example, using IBM Project Blue Spruce, a sales rep could in a browser conduct a video chat with a client while they complete an online sales form.

iTel Companies, Inc. is using the IBM Blue Spruce Project code for its mental health offering, iTelepsych. iTelepsych will allow patients to virtually meet and communicate with psychologists, psychiatrists and master therapists via video conferencing for real-time medical treatment from any location with an internet connection.

The offering also provides medical professionals the ability to expedite critical decision making by allowing them to simultaneously manipulate data and collaboratively discuss brain images and lab results. iTelepsych can be customized for individual healthcare providers, and can provide a cohesive experience for the patient by being the portal to HIPPA compliant telehealth consultations.

Fig 1: Search Results for Breast Cancer Patients that also had COPD.

Fig 2: Actual MRI images for a specific patient viewable on an iPad.

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“iTelepsych helps doctors easily establish a practice with patients who are not able to leave their homes or attend typical office for appointments. Now, with Blue Spruce technology from IBM, people can access the mental healthcare they need even if they cannot come to a doctor’s office,” said Eric Greenman, MD and chief executive officer iTel Companies.

“IBM believes an ongoing commitment to open source and cooperative applications is a critical component for building a smarter, healthier planet,” said David Boloker, chief technology officer, Emerging Technologies, IBM. “We are pleased to open code and drive innovation in partnership with the Dojo Foundation Project in an effort to streamline and enhance research and real-time interactive analysis of participant data.”

See a video demo here

For more information on IBM’s open source initiatives, please visit: http://www.ibm.com/opensource

FOSS advocate who’s free, frank and fearless

Here is Sam Varghese’s in-depth interview interview with me. Not bad if I say so myself: FOSS advocate who’s free, frank and fearless.

“Journalist, FOSS advocate, feminist – Carla Schroder is all these and more. But more than anything it is her straight talking that marks her out – when she takes a stand on issues she is driven by conviction.

“This means that often she is at the receiving end but it is something that she can more than handle. The good thing about dealing with her is that she never allows her personal and professional worlds to mix – even her worst enemy will be allowed to have his/her say on a site which she edits. This is indeed a rare trait.

“Schroder was recently in the news when her gig with Linux Today, one of the better-known FOSS news aggregation sites, ended in dismissal. Her readers liked what she was doing but the management apparently did not. The terms of her leaving do not permit her to say anything about it.

“But there is a lot more to Schroder than what she did at Linux Today. She has moved on and rejoined LXer where she was an editor before joining Linux Today. She took some time off to speak to iTWire about her present, her past and what she looks forward to…”

Screw You. Pay Me.

Why do publishers think it is OK to not pay authors? I don’t know, and I don’t care. It is enough to know that there are publishers who think it OK to play games with us; to stall, ignore, lie, and trot out the same worn excuses as though we’re dumb enough to believe them. They pay themselves, which apparently means all is well with the world.

But it’s OK to stiff freelance authors. I cannot fathom the asshole mentality that thinks this is acceptable, and I don’t want to. It’s gross enough doing the monthly inspection of my sewer system.

Suppose that it’s not assholery in a particular circumstance, but the publisher is having a cash flow squeeze. What’s the right thing to do? Don’t pay the writers! No, that is the wrong answer. The right answer is the publisher takes a pay cut, even a symbolic one, and honors his obligations whatever it takes. Get a line of credit, press debtors for payment. Negotiate with the writers– maybe they will take a delayed or reduced payment in exchange for a later payment with a bonus to compensate.

Quit laughing, I can dream. Quick poll: have any of you fine freelance authors ever received compensation, like a cash bonus or accumulated interest, and a sincere apology for a late payment from the person actually responsible? Probably your beleaguered editor was all kinds of remorseful, but that doesn’t count if they have no control over payables.

Bottlenecks and Worms

The worst of all worlds is having an editor who won’t help you. I had one for years who was a world-class bottleneck and a wormy apologist. Author invoices landed on his desk to die. When he finally approved them they landed in an accounts payable system designed for delay. Did he help? Pshaw of course not, after all his paycheck arrived on time every month, and the A/P clerks were scary.

This is problem that has plagued freelance authors (and musicians and all creative artists) from the dawn of corporate-asshole time. It doesn’t smell any better with age. It does increase my appreciation of my good publishers who pay on time without making me nag and threaten. It fuels my determination to self-publish, because if I fail it’s on me, and if I succeed I reap the rewards. And it will cure the nausea I feel when dipshit publishers who play funny money games profit from my work.

You might enjoy this video Fuck You. Pay Me.

4 money-saving, open source business intelligence suites

Business intelligence (BI) is one of those buzzphrases that sound super-cool, but are often misunderstood. What is business intelligence and should you care? Do you need to drop a giant bucket of money on BI?
Smart, bold decisions

There is little that is magical about making wise decisions for your business. The fabled steely-eyed rock-ribbed American businessman or businesswoman who stuns allies and competitors alike with daring and boldness doesn’t pull those daring decisions out of the air — the smart ones rely on data and analysis. Lots and lots of data and analysis. There are two general categories of business intelligence: competitive intelligence, and internal intelligence. Business intelligence doesn’t have a strict definition and could encompass both, but for the purposes of this discussion we’ll limit it to internal intelligence, because it is most important to have a thorough understanding of what’s happening in your own shop…read the rest at ITWorld.com

Making money in open source: Drupal future looks bright

Who says there’s no money in open source? Demand for Drupal talent is growing, and opportunities abound for developers, designers and artists, and related disciplines such as database and system administration. Let’s take a look at what some Drupal consulting firms are doing, and get an inside view from a Drupal core maintainer.