So today I am trying out a Lenovo - Tablet .
So far - I am impressed. The device has a solid feel to it - unlike the HP TC1100 or even the HP TC4200.
The keyboard is cramped when compared to a fullside keyboard. I'm using my HP NC6230 for my primary laptop these days .. but the touchpas works only about 1/3 of the time so it is going back (again) to HP to get rebuilt and I will not be the happy owner when it comes back. Perhaps I am too rough on the ppor thing. Back in the old days - my Compaq Armada M700 took a kickin like this and worked well for years. Not so these day, it seems.
Ok .. back to the mini-review. You can read about the specs in other reviews. that's now what I care about right now. Most of the products are similar in specs. I tried the Gateway CX200 for a few hours a few weeks ago and didn't like it. Too big.
This thing may be a tiny bit too small. Hmm .. I am used to the trackpad, but the nipple is pretty big - so it's not too hard to get used to .. and it is sensitive - unlike the HP's nipple - which requires too much pressure to control.
Screen is nice. I don't care much about viewing angle .. so the big shiny gateway isn't really necessary. Not watching Lost on the computer (much).
The fingerprint ID stuff is cool but I'm not sure I would use it.
The laptop is super quiet and seems to run cool - which is .. um .. cool.
So far, this gets an A- ... and may be my next laptop. we'll see. I'd like to get my hands on a Toshiba M400 .. or even better .. an HP TC 4400 .. to see if the Duo will make much of a difference .. before I pull the trigger on this one.
Flock just released their version 0.5 version and I think it's ready to become my default browser. They have put together a perfect set of tools that combines browsing with blog editing and bookmark saving .. (and some other features too ..) all on top of the Firefox codebase.
Well done.
Google Personal
is very good. I wish it had RSS .. but I'll bet it will soon. Thanks Dave
What's Blogrank?
If you use Movabletype .. and you are bleeding-edge nerd ... and you want to get your blog ranked so the new-car-smell cool new 2005 version of medlogs lists you as one of the best ... you can follow these directions to get ranked. What's it do? You'll have to wait and see. But the sooner you get votes .. the more you'll have .. and the more you have ... ;-)
I'll write up directions for blogger and typepad and wordpress etc sometime .. but for now ... try this .. and if you don't understand this stuff .. then it's probably not something you should do yet.
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(well .. no-one's gonna do this .. code removed for now .. not-yet-ready for prime-time)
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Usability
Don't you hate websites where you click on a "score" or "rank" or something and you have to submit a form .. so it brings you to a page where it says ... "got your vote, thanks" and then you have to go back .. ugh.
Solved that problem here .. with an elegant solution: http 204 header. huh? The server says "no one is home" so the browser says OK and doesn't load the page. But the server sees the request for a page .. and can read the URL variables and plop them into a database. No round-trip for the poor user. Kinda like the old "gif as a datapipe" trick .. but much easier to implement.
Going over the "new addition request" entries from Medlogs just now .. I came across another one that I'm not sure how to handle. The URL is medline-dot-blogspot-dot-com .. I don't want to make a link .. you you'll have to do the typing (or just remove the -dot-s). Making a link would build traffic for the site .. and I'm not sure that I want to do that. Looking at the "blog" and all recent posts .. there are a few things that make me think that this site is just a revenue ploy - to make money on Google advertising.
Am I over-reacting? Post a comment if you think I should add this to "medlogs" ... otherwise .. I'll delete it from the holding area .. and expect to see more like it. This is why we need to have an editor for Medlogs ..
Not a week goes by without some additions to Medlogs.com. We're over 300 blogs now. Yes, yes .. we'll provide an OPML sometime. It's in the spec ;-)
I went through the submissions from the past week last night and added a handful .. along with many submissions of weblogs that just don't fit despite a medical slant. Most are commercial websites that masquerade as blogs. Perhaps this is a trend we need to watch for. Ugh.
My favorite new addition:
inteuri: to contemplate - a poetic weblog written by an intern in psychiatry.
Clusty the Clustering Engine now replaces google as my default search engine.
Today, I added the 200th blog to Medlogs.com. Here's how blog addition works.
Here's the "I remember when" part: Nearly five years ago, I started Docnotes. Here's the first post. I think I was writing a similar web-based discussion for a while before that, but my entries are not archived .. so .. lost forever. The first iteration was with Userland Frontier. Then I moved to Seth Dillingham's Conversant. Next it was back to Userland Radio .. and then to MovableType, where the blog remains. I'm tempted by Ray Camden's BlogCFC. We'll see. I like MT .. and it's working pretty well, despite some quirks. I also have a TypePad account, which is used for other little blog projects.
Here's the question: (you didn't know there was going to be a question .. did you?) .. as Medlogs has grown, I've been finding that the signal:noise ratio is decreasing. Medical Blogs used to be a good way to find useful information quickly. They were also a way for us to provide a window into our thinking and our practices .. which I think all of us agreed was good. There have been several well written articles on medical weblogs .. but I still think the best was in Medicine on the Net .. by Bonnie Darvies. Unfortunately, it's not free or (!) available on the net .. which of course is silly. Kinda like Gartner research .. it's good stuff, but you have to pay to get to it.
Oh yeah .. I was asking a question. How to we keep the usefulness of weblogs high. Go ahead and click on that one .. it's a link tot he UVA website, and includes an image of the Pyramid of Information Mastery. Where do weblogs fit on this pyramid? How can I help to filter this (or how can you help filter this) .. so that weblogs remain (become?) a part of the pyramid.
One thought that I have had is "hits." Since we changes the main medlogs pages to include only excerpts of every post (the poll is still open .. but preference for partial feed remains at about 75%) the number of times that readers click the link to go read the full post is sored and displayed on the page. Presumably, the authors who generate the most hits are of the greatest interest to the readers. Are these the most useful Blogs? Should they be "featured" in some way?
Is the recent "grand rounds" effort a good way of accomplishing this? Perhaps ... hmm .. maybe I link to (or include full text of) the current week's grand rounds on a special page on medlogs .. hmm
Please share your opinion .. either with a post of our own .. or with a comment here. We didn't address this much at last year's bloggercon (video feed of the medical session is here ... moderated by some nerd .. yeh .. me).
If you're going to Bloggercon III this year, I'd suggest that this may be a topic for conversation at the medical weblogs session .. which Enoch will be moderating.
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OK .. so I turned comments back on here .. so we'll see how bad the commentspam is this time .. and in the context of Enoch's post on the topic .. we may turn off comments over at medlogs .. but I'd sure like to have something in the RSS or ATOM feed to help resolve this ..
The medical weblogs aggregator is getting more use these days ... we're getting closer to an RSS feeed (of rss feeds) so if you want to use your aggregator to read the medical weblogs aggregator .. you can.
The other experimental addition is the addition of comments. Blogborygmi posted the other day on the expanding use of medlogs.com, and lamented:
One concern with medlogs.com is that it'll stifle reader comments -- ya can't see 'em from their site, and you're less likely to visit a blog if you've just read the latest post on an aggregator. (Something's gotta explain the dearth of opinions lately). And it seems kind of arbitrary which blogs are indexed in toto, and which get the blurb treatment.
a) Well .. I agree that comments can be useful and interesting, but they're not part of the RSS feed that weblogs publish .. so there would be no way for us to show the comments or add a method of building the dialogue. The next-best thing would be to host the comments ourselves and build a threaded discussion. Dave wants to do this .. so then medlogs would become the slashdot of medical geeks (we'll call it DaveDot). Short of DaveDot .. we've turned on Haloscan comments. IN the title bar of every post, you can post a comment about that post in medlogs. This may provide a method of maintaining comments - without the need for every weblog to host comments. As you can see .. I've disabled comments on Docnotes due to too much commentspam. We'll see how this works. Please let us know what you think.
b) Regarding the arbitrary nature of the how much of the weblog appears in Medlogs .. it's all about the RSS. Some RSS or Atom feeds provide all of the post - so we provide that to you on medlogs. Other feeds have only an excerpt .. so that's what you get. So it's not arbitrary at all ... and in fact, I'm not sure which one I like better. We would certainly be able to cut off part of the feeds (so all feeds show only an excerpt) and sometimes I think that this would be better (especially for the graphics-intensive feeds) .. but if we had only an excerpt, we'd have to be clicking on the URL for the post every time .. which defeats the "get it all here" concept of the aggregator.
The new version of Medlogs.com - The News Aggregator for Medical Topics is now oficially live. This entry will serve as an FAQ for the new version of the site.
That's it for now. I'll update this post as time permits. If you have additional questions that you think I should put in the FAQ, please let me know.
The beta version of the new Medical Weblogs site continues to evolve. I've been adding weblogs and trying to organize things, while Dave fixed the CSS and built a blogroll on the side. I'm working on a form to permit you to add feeds I don't have. I'll open it up for a few days .. so medbloggers will notice it and please do help me get some more blogs in there ...
Here's a sneak peek at the newest iteration of the medlogs medical weblog aggregator. It sorts posts in order. So the most recently updated welbogs are at the top. Maybe this is incentive to keep active! We've also separated things a bit (still working on the categories .. comments and corrections requested) ... so resident blogs are separate from physician blogs which are separate from newsfeeds such as reuters and medscape, etc. Dave has, of course, helped enormously .. as I couldn't have done this myself. Required some re-writing of feedonfeeds , and a bit of php magic. More enhancements on the way .. and a bit of debugging before we move this over to the main medlogs url.
I've finally updated the back-end that runs medlogs. It's been re-built entirely .. with some help from Dave. I had some trouble with the CSS ... and he got things fixed for me.
Medlogs is now a much better medical weblog and news aggregator. I'm going to break things up into categories. Still haven't figured out a good way to get them sorted by date .. which is what I really want.
Dave has done some great work with coldfusion and LDAP. Not documented anywhere else .. so if you are a nerd looking for info on how to do coldfusion security with LDAP to Novell or Windows ... Dave's blog will show you how.
I'm in Toronto (home of the Blue Jays) for my annual pilgrimage to the STFM meeting. Toronto is a nice city. Reminds me of Seattle. Family medicine educators from all over the world come to the meeting to share ideas, successes and frustrations. Today was the awards luncheon and I was especially impressed with the acceptance speech of Ellen Beck who was recognized for the work she's done building medical student-run health clinics in San Diego and then creating a fellowship program to help others to create similar clinics in other cities. The people who are involved in STFM are dedicated, caring, thoughtful .. and just plain nice people. I'm not saying that other physicians or even other family physicians don't meet this description, but .. as a rule .. the people at STFM are the sort of characters I'd like my kids to be when they grow up ...
Working with my colleague on a web strategy proposal. I've found some useful resources.
a) Jakob Nielsen's March 29th article on usability is a good reminder that a well designed website (or intranet) will same time and therefore money.
b) This is a nice little document that serves as an excellent introduction to web strategy/tactics with a clear glossary as well.
Yahoo's RSS aggregator is a wonderful adjunct to my.yahoo.com portal.
Despite the advertising, my.yahoo remains my home page on most of the computers I use .. though I recently moved to oddpost for web-based e-mail as it's much faster than Yahoo - and it's MUCH easier to manage my mail.
oh yeah .. back to Yahoo. It's pretty easy to use ..
The Oncalls physician scheduling system has supported RSS for about 6 months - though most users don't know how to do that.
Here's what it looks like:
Pretty cool .. eh?