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| Jun Feb |
Common Links
Jax WWPP - Web info
WWPP weblogs
IHI and Friends
Webmaster/development
 Aggregated XML feed
Pursuing Perfection
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p9/13/04')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p9/13/04')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p9/13/04')"> Monday, September 13, 2004
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p155')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p155')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p155')"> ]
;">Websites too complicated?
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" title="item">
 I was reading this article this morning. All the websites mentioned here are in the UK, but I was wondering how the questions raised in the article applies to the way websites for medical information are built in the U.S.? One thing I did notice is that all the sites are different. Each site requires learning new navigational information. There are no standard rules for presentation on the web. Would it not be better to find a way to optimize the presentation of certain types of information? Should there not be a medical group, in concert with a web design group, be working to create a "Roberts Rules of Order" for the presentation of medical information on the web. — Jack
BBC NEWS | Health | Diabetes websites too complicated:
Diabetes websites too complicated
Language used was beyond average comprehension
Online health advice for people with diabetes is often too complex to understand, analysis suggests.
A scientist at Bath University looked at pages about diabetes on 15 internet health sites run mainly by charities and official bodies.
He found people would need a reading ability of an educated 11 to 17-year-old to understand the sites.
However, he said the average reading age of people in the UK was equivalent to an educated nine-year-old.
Complicated language
Dr Maged Boulos from Bath University found the NHS Direct Online site was the hardest to understand.
People would need the reading ability of an educated person aged 16 to comprehend information, he estimated.
Other difficult sites were NetDoctor.co.uk, Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation UK, and the British Diabetic Association which required a reading age of at least 15."
(Related link Diabetes UK.)
(Related link NHSdirect.)
(Related link netdoctor.co.uk.)
(Related link Juvenile Diabetes.)
(Related link Prodigy.Net.)
(Related link University College London Hospitals.)
(Related link BestTreatments.)
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" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p8/23/04')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p8/23/04')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p8/23/04')"> Monday, August 23, 2004
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p154')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p154')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p154')"> ]
;">Medical Records May Go Online - Yahoo! News
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Medical Records May Go Online
Mon Aug 23, 3:00 AM ET
Mark S. Sullivan, Medill News Service
This is the kind of story that may spark the imagination of some people. — Jack
It's five in the morning. You're in a hotel room having a serious allergic reaction to something you ate. Do you know where your medical records are?
If you're like most Americans, they're resting peacefully in a manila folder at your doctor's office. And the writing inside looks something like Sanskrit.
Someday, that information could be only a modem away--or closer, perhaps in a keychain drive in your luggage. The Bush administration has released a strategic plan for every U.S. citizen's health information to be stored in an "electronic health record" central database within ten years. Each person would have a "personal health record," an electronic file the individual would manage, that could exchange information with the EHR database.
The PHR would contain information on a person's insurance plan, prescriptions, allergies, medical history, and conditions such as asthma or diabetes."
(Via Yahoo! News.)
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" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p6/18/04')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p6/18/04')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p6/18/04')"> Friday, June 18, 2004
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p152')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p152')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p152')"> ]
;">Wired News: Dragging Doctors to the Info Age
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This is an article I found very interesting. I include an image of our site, because I think this is one of the things where we are leading with our concept for tomorrow.
Frustrated by the hospital industry's achingly slow adoption of basic technological safeguards, the Bush administration and Congress are gearing up to put more pressure on doctors and administrators. For perhaps a decade or more, however, millions of patients will continue to endure the high risk of deadly medical mistakes because there's no computer to catch the errors.
Internal Revenue Service. Physicians can spend entire days without touching a keyboard, and nurses routinely track patients' progress through a series of handwritten notes passed from person to person.
"It's this huge, ridiculous game of telephone," said surgeon Dr. Robert Wachter, co-author of a new book exploring why medical errors kill tens of thousands of Americans each year.
More potential disaster looms on the medication front, where the "chicken scratch" on prescription forms often confuses pharmacists, who end up providing the wrong drugs and, in some cases, killing people.
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p2/25/04')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p2/25/04')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p2/25/04')"> Wednesday, February 25, 2004
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p145')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p145')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p145')"> ]
;">Writing for the Web (Alertbox March 15, 1997)
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This is another writer I respect. Jakob Nielsen is a well respected web usability guru. He writes a monthly article on various aspects of the web. This is an article from 1997 about writing for the web. I used this article to help teach my students in Denmark.
Jakob Nielsen's Alertbox for March 15, 1997:
Be Succinct! (Writing for the Web)
The three main guidelines for writing for the Web are:
Be succinct: write no more than 50% of the text you would have used in a hardcopy publication
Write for scannability: don't require users to read long continuous blocks of text
Use hypertext to split up long information into multiple pages
Short Texts
Reading from computer screens is about 25% slower than reading from paper. Even users who don't know this human factors research usually say that they feel unpleasant when reading online text. As a result, people don't want to read a lot of text from computer screens: you should write 50% less text and not just 25% less since it's not only a matter of reading speed but also a matter of feeling good. We also know that users don't like to scroll: one more reason to keep pages short.
The screen readability problem will be solved in the future, since screens with 300 dpi resolution have been invented and have been found to have as good readability as paper. High-resolution screens are currently too expensive (high-end monitors in commercial use have about 110 dpi), but will be available in a few years and common ten years from now.
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p2/23/04')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p2/23/04')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p2/23/04')"> Monday, February 23, 2004
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Marc asked me about some rules for writing. My main focus is that a story should have three things, a beginning, a middle, and an end. It should start with a premise, contain justification, and then resolve. It is unnecessary that the resolutions be the expected conclusion.
But after that, I found this article. It is also useful to think about this article. This is just a very small start. Go to the article and there are 10 rules that may be helpful.
Easy on the Adverbs, Exclamation Points and Especially Hooptedoodle
Elmore's Rules of Writing
By ELMORE LEONARD ( Series ) 1170 words
These are rules I've picked up along the way to help me remain invisible when I'm writing a book, to help me show rather than tell what's taking place in the story. If you have a facility for language and imagery and the sound of your voice pleases you, invisibility is not what you are after, and you can skip the rules. Still, you might look them over.
1. Never open a book with weather.
If it's only to create atmosphere, and not a character's reaction to the weather, you don't want to go on too long. The reader is apt to leaf ahead looking for people. There are exceptions. If you happen to be Barry Lopez, who has more ways to describe ice and snow than an Eskimo, you can do all the weather reporting you want.
2. Avoid prologues.
They can be annoying, especially a prologue following an introduction that comes after a foreword. But these are ordinarily found in nonfiction. A prologue in a novel is backstory, and you can drop it in anywhere you want.
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p2/16/04')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p2/16/04')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p2/16/04')"> Monday, February 16, 2004
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" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p143')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p143')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p143')"> ]
;">We have updated our Frontier/Manila server
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We have updated our Manila Software. This is
good for all weblogs because the Manila server actually hosts the Radio
Weblogs Radio Community Server, as well as all of the Manila Weblogs.
Many thanks to Marc Pierson and Tom Bromet, and Lori, and whoever else
had a hand in its upgrading.
As we move forward, the developments in Manila 9.1 will give us some great
new cross-platform browser editing tools. |
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I noticed this took place in Seattle. I was wondering if any of the WWPP people got a chance to see any of this?
Beams cut need for cancer surgery
Cancer cells can be selectively targeted
Scientists are perfecting a 'virtual scalpel' which uses ultrasound beams to kill cancer cells without the need for surgery. Unlike radiotherapy and drugs, the technique also leaves healthy tissue next to a tumour undamaged. Preliminary trials in the UK and China show it is effective - and has fewer side effects than traditional treatment. Details were presented at the American Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting in Seattle.
Read the entire article -> BBC article
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p2/12/04')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p2/12/04')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p2/12/04')"> Thursday, February 12, 2004
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" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p141')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p141')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p141')"> ]
;">Playing with a Mail list.
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This is a reposting for todays date. This is only a test of the aggregator emailing all new postings to a mail list. If a person is subscribed to that mail list, the intent is that Radio emails the new posting to the mail list, which then emails the posting to all subscribers. ... Right now there are only two subscribers, Marc and myself.
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p1/21/04')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p1/21/04')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p1/21/04')"> Wednesday, January 21, 2004
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" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p139')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p139')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p139')"> ]
;">We are back. ... !
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The Manila/Radio/wwpp web server is up and running again. The image on the right indicates that all references to the two WWPP servers are "Green". Green is good. Last Friday and over the weekend and until yesterday, two of them were red. Red is bad.
I still have not heard on weather, or not it was the power supply that croaked. But, we are back in business. Remember, I can be reached at my email address of ijak@mac.com, or via telephone at 858 278-7308. ... And that is that.
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p12/16/03')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p12/16/03')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p12/16/03')"> Tuesday, December 16, 2003
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p134')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p134')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p134')"> ]
;">aR test for the morning
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Update 3. ... The 18th of Dec, with a new css in two locations.
Update2. ... The next morning checking aa new aR download. to see if it has the new css.
Update1. ... This is with the newest 2.13b of ar, downloaded this afternooon.
This is just a check of my active rendered Home page. ... This version is supposed to generate indented places for the sub parts of the days.
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p12/11/03')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p12/11/03')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p12/11/03')"> Thursday, December 11, 2003
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p133')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p133')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p133')"> ]
;">Hello,
The Peace Health IT department will be changing some routing information a good part of Monday the 15th of Dec.
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What that means to us is that all access to wwpp.org, our Manila sites (Internal and External), Our Radio Sites (published and external), and our Streaming server, will be spotty at best and perhaps, nonexistent at times.
Jack
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p132')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p132')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p132')"> ]
;">I have started working with Marc Barrot again.
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Marc is the man that developed the Active Renderer we are using to render our home pages. Marc is developing version 2.0 of the aR (activeRenderer)
Version 2.0 is what is under this particular site "Jax WWPP" . Just my site. So if you see any problems with your site, it is not because of me futzing around. It is some real reason, so let me know.
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p8/12/03')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p8/12/03')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p8/12/03')"> Tuesday, August 12, 2003
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p128')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p128')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p128')"> ]
;">The wooden mirror
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" title="item">
 The Wooden Mirror project is an art installation, and as such the goals leading to
its creation are a bit vague. The piece explores the line between analog and digital.
In the essence of the piece is the notion of inflicting digital order on a material
that is as analog as it gets ñ wood. I was hoping to take the computational power
of a computer and video camera , and seamlessly integrate them into the physicality
warmth and beauty of a wooden mirror. The piece reflects any object or person in
front of it by organizing the wooden pieces. It moves fast enough to create live
animation. The simple interaction between the viewer and the piece remove any questions
regarding how to operate the piece, it is a mirror. The non reflective surfaces of
the wood are able to reflect an image thanks to the involvement of the computer that
is manipulating them to reflect more or less light as they tilt towards or away of
a light source. The image reflected in the mirror is a very minimal one. It is, I
believe, the least amount of information required to convey a picture (Less than
an icon on a computer and without color) It is amazing how little information this
is for a computer, and yet how much character it can have, (and what an endeavor
it is to create it in the physical world). The Mirror produces a distinctive sound
when someone moves in front of it. It is the sound of hundreds of tiny motors. The
sound is directly correlated to the motion of the person in front of it, and gives
a very pleasing secondary feed back to the image.
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p8/4/03')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p8/4/03')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p8/4/03')"> Monday, August 4, 2003
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What mothers eat during pregancy could have a fundamental and lifelong effect on the genes of their children, suggests an intriguing new study in mice.
Researchers found they could change the coat colour of baby mice by feeding their mothers different levels of four common nutrients during pregnancy. These altered how the pups' cells read their genes. As a result the mice were also less prone to obesity and diabetes than genetically identical mice whose mothers received no supplement.
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p7/4/03')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p7/4/03')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p7/4/03')"> Friday, July 4, 2003
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p125')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p125')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p125')"> ]
;">Jax San Francisco trip
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I went away for about a week. Most of the time I was driving but I did take time to shoot a few pictures. Most of these pictures are of places you have seen before, but maybe not. Anyway I hope you enjoy these photos. I had a really nice time and saw many things in San Francisco. Then I headed back towards San Diego and I was going to drive along the coast to take some more pictures, but it was foggy, so I turned left.
Link to Jax San Francisco Trip
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" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p6/15/03')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p6/15/03')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p6/15/03')"> Sunday, June 15, 2003
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" title="[Macro error: Can't evaluate the expression because the name "wedgeTitle" hasn't been defined.]
" onclick="nodeSwitch ('p124')" onmouseover="nodeHigh ('p124')" onmouseout="nodeLow ('p124')"> ]
;"> Mars Rover Liftoff
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NASA's 'Spirit' Rises On Its Way To Mars
A NASA robotic geologist named Spirit began its seven-month journey to Mars at 1:58:47 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time (10:58:47 a.m. Pacific Daylight Time) today when its Delta II launch vehicle thundered aloft from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla.
The spacecraft, first of a twin pair in NASA's Mars Exploration Rover project, separated successfully from the Delta's third stage about 36 minutes after launch, while over the Indian Ocean. Flight controllers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., received a signal from the spacecraft at 2:48 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time (11:48 a.m. Pacific Daylight Time) via the Canberra, Australia, antenna complex of NASA's Deep Space Network. All systems are operating as expected.
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© Copyright
2007
Jack F. Mancilla
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Last update:
1/28/07; 10:57:52 AM
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This theme was created for WWPP by Jack
F. Mancilla |
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