Showing posts with label mobile computing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mobile computing. Show all posts

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Optometric Billing-Mobile Devices Changing Healthcare


"As healthcare costs continue to rise, tablet and smartphone apps are steadily entering the mainstream as appealing and less expensive alternatives to non-invasive procedures and tests. People can now test their visioncount caloriessend microscopic images, and more, all using mobile devices."
Our Friends at Noble Vision believe it and so do we! Get on board in your office with mobile devices today! (read entire article here)

Are you using mobile technology in your office? Why or Why Not? Tell us below!


Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Optometric Billing- 25% Of All U.S Physicians Own a Tablet!

At least twice per month it seems that we bring to light just how important it will be for optometrists to "Jumb on the iPad bandwagon"! Well, today, our friends at Noble Vision have said the same thing. They posted an article today that highlighted just how important these new tools are/can be.

"Today, 25 percent of all US physicians own a tablet device, while average consumers can use mobile devices asdiagnostic tools and share healthcare information via social networking. Mobile devices also provide consumers with the concept of “quantified self,” helping them monitor and improve their health."
Read the entire article here


We believe whole heartedly that tablets are the new "PC" and will become more mainstream this year and into 2013. In fact, it was announced yesterday that Apple is now the leading provider of "PC's" thanks to record sales of the iPad in the last quarter '04 having toppled the once dominant Hewlett Packard. 


Here at opticXpress we test our optometric billing software and services on tablet devices regularly and encourage clients and non-clients alike to implement tablets into their office structure whenever possible. We encourage you to do the same if you haven't already. 



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Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Optometric Billing-Apple Leading The Way In Mobile Computing

Take a look at this article from ZDnet. It's just one more reason to choose iOS products as your mobile device
of choice to fuel your optometric practice!

"via ZDNet for iOS
Enterprise iPhone 4S activations spike, highlight Apple's halo effect

Apple sold more than 37 million iPhones in its December quarter and apparently a nice chunk of those went to the enterprise, according to Good Technology. Tim Cook, Apple CEO, gave his quarterly nod to the enterprise and highlighted enterprise accounts and Fortune 500 adoption stats of iPhones and iPads. In a nutshell, Apple is seeing a halo effect in its corporate, consumer and education account...(Read more)

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Optometric Billing-More Mobile Platform Information

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Optometric Billing-More Mobile Platform Information

The news keeps rolling in about iOS vs. Android for mobile computing dominance and it just doesn't continue to get any better for Android. Take a look at the article below and as yourself when you're done reading it " would I really want to run my optometric practice using this software"?

As I've said before, I am pro iOS in terms of a mobile computing platform. We use it here at our office extensively and are even testing ways to allow doctors to perfrom eye exams and send us optometric billing information using it. Until Windows 8 comes out or Android somehow floors me, we're going to continue operating like this and articles like the one below are a primary reason why.

Happy reading! Remember, contact opticXpress for all your optometric billing needs. We are standing by!

On Tablets, Android 4.0 is an Ice Cream Headache

By | January 17, 2012, 9:48pm PST

For the last two weeks, I’ve exclusively been using Google’s Android 4.0 “Ice Cream Sandwich” for all of my tablet computing needs.

As I explained in my last piece on January 4, I had already installed and tested various pre-release community versions for my Motorola XOOM. The XOOM, unlike other 10.1″ Honeycomb tablets is a Google Experience device, is popular with Android tablet developers because it is a stable piece of hardware, and thus has been one of the very first tablet devices to receive the latest Android software.

The version I eventually settled on and used for most of the last two weeks was one put together by the talented folks at Team EOS, formerly known as “Tiamat” which has produced various customized “rooted” ROMs and overclocked kernels for the XOOM in the past, as well as early support for the tablet’s MicroSD card even before Motorola itself provided it in an update months later.

It has only been in the last two days that I have been able to obtain and install the semi-official Motorola XOOM Android 4.0.3 ROM, build IML77. I say semi-official because it is considered to be a “soak build” that the company is currently seeding to a pilot group of testers.

However, it is almost certainly going to be very close to the finalized software that most XOOM owners will receive as an Over the Air (OTA) update very shortly.

That being said, my experience with the Team EOS and Motorola IML77 builds have been extremely similar. I have used the same group of applications with both, and have experienced similar behavior and issues with the OS, so the likelyhood of there being ROM-specific issues affecting my general observations is quite small.

Before I get accused of being an Android hater, let me make one thing perfectly clear, and that is I like Android a lot. I use an Android phone (a Verizon Galaxy Nexus) and I’ve been an Android user for the past two years. I’m also quite educated in the systems architecture of the OS itself.

So whatever comments that follow in this piece, please keep that in mind before pulling out the flame thrower.

I’ve been bringing the XOOM with Ice Cream Sandwich on the road with me for two weeks, back and forth to Chicago. I’ve used it extensively while tethering via Wi-Fi to 4G and also connected to fast broadband in my hotels and in my home, so I have a good sampling as to how it performs. Overall, I’m not happy with it.

Now, there are certain aspects of Ice Cream Sandwich which certainly feel more responsive than its predecessor, Honeycomb 3.2. I’ve said so previously. Generally speaking, the UI is snappier.

However, it doesn’t have the benefit of a year’s worth of bugfixes and thus there are times when the software is actually less stable than Honeycomb. A lot of apps have unusually long startup times and render slowly or freeze up on the screen, even if you force the GPU to render 2D operations in the “Developer Options” menu.

And then there’s the dreaded “This App is not responding” dialog which gives you the option to wait or force close the app. But sometimes you’re not so lucky and you need to shut down the OS and re-start to get a stable environment again.

I have a whole bunch of personal issues with the way the UI is designed and is implemented on Android tablets that I’ve documented previously which could very will hurt the platform’s market acceptance, but those could be boiled down to overall aesthetic issues, not actual functional problems. This is not to say that aesthetic issues and UI design isn’t important, but app compatibility and performance issues rank much higher on my list of peeves.

And yes, I still hate the way Android’s multitasking is implemented.

Having researched the multitasking changes in Ice Cream Sandwich a bit further, I now realize that the “Recent tasks” button is in fact a task switcher that can in fact stop tasks, but it’s not a particularly useful one because even though it is supposed to “nice kill” the processes when you stop them, it doesn’t stop services from re-spawning and it won’t necessarily kill badly-behaving applications, like say, Facebook, which has to be one of the most awfully written pieces of garbage since iTunes.

So you have to end up using the real task killer in the Settings menu anyway.

It also doesn’t distinguish between tasks you “recently started” and tasks that are actually still running either. And it won’t stop services and apps from re-spawning themselves when you don’t want them to, and there’s no way to control apps which re-spawn services on a global operating system level and on a granular basis, just like iOS has with push notifications which you can turn on and off on an app by app basis.

That sort of thing is left up to the Android app developer, which may or may not put in a setting to turn off things such as polling of the network, et cetera.

I’m also aware of the “unused memory is wasted memory” argument and that Android releases resources on its own and also caches processes and apps so they start up faster.

Well guess what. If the memory isn’t there when a demanding application needs it, and the task killer, automatic or not is unable to stop an errant process, you’re screwed. Sorry folks, but if kill an app using a task manager or switcher, I really want to know that it is actually gone. And I suspect so do a majority of end-users that don’t work with things like Linux every day.

Enough with the multitasking arguments that I’m never going to win with the fandroids. Let’s get back to apps.

The apps that seem to run slowly, have long startup times and freeze up in Ice Cream Sandwich are graphics intensive programs that are are built in Dalvik, aka Java bytecode. The worst offenders I have seen have been Netflix’s main movie browsing UI, the Pulse newsreader, Weatherbug HD and yes, Facebook.

It’s difficult to tell exactly if there is a pattern to which sort of apps are the most problematic because unlike Apple, which periodically makes their developers re-certify on new OS releases or face exclusion from their App Store, Google doesn’t blacklist apps on the Android Market that were built to older Android APIs which might not run correctly.

And the Android Market doesn’t classify apps by what level of APIs they use, so you can’t selectively choose the newest or most updated stuff. Or even filter out older apps accordingly.

But I suspect that anything that was not built to take advantage of Honeycomb’s APIs to specifically run as a tablet app is going to have issues.

Google has improved screen rendering issues by allowing apps that were designed for smartphones (such as FaceBook) to either stretch to fill the screen or rasterize in their native resolution, a la iPhone apps on the iPad. But it’s not a totally foolproof process as on Apple’s iOS.

For the most part when I found an app that was designed to take advantage of Honeycomb (3.0, 3.1, 3.2) and was pure Dalvik, such as IMDB or Flixter, it ran well, although still not as responsive as their iOS counterparts. But the vast majority of the apps which exist on the Android Market or Amazon’s own Appstore are written against APIs for 1.5, 1.6, 2.0, 2.1, 2.2 and 2.3.

Google’s own ICS 4.0.3 apps such as GMail, YouTube, G+, Google Books and the Browser all run well, but that’s to be expected, since the company knows its OS and APIs better than anyone else and can optimize accordingly.

3rd-party Applications built in the Native Development Kit (NDK) which are written in native C++ fare far better. But the majority of these apps are games, and the basic architecture of the NDK hasn’t changed substantially since Honeycomb, so you expect stuff that runs effectively on the metal to still run pretty well.

Aye, and there’s the rub. NDK apps which run in C++ run great. Optimized Honeycomb or Ice Cream Sandwich Dalvik (Java) apps run better than they did previously, but not as fast as native C++.

Of course, I’ve been running all my Ice Cream Sandwich tablet tests on a XOOM, which is an NVIDIA Tegra 2 dual-core design. Already, the Tegra 3 quad-core tablets with faster GPUs such as the Asus Transformer Prime are starting to ship, but there are a few Tegra 2’s that just started shipping as well.

So does that mean in order to get optimal Android 4.0 performance, one should get a newer quad-core tablet and lower their expectations on existing models receiving the update?

That’s a bit of a nasty flavor of ice cream to swallow, considering that Apple has managed to exact extremely fluid performance out of even the first-generation iPad on iOS 5, using all native C++ and Objective-C based applications, which has a measly single core processor and 256MB of RAM, nevermind the iPad 2 with dual-core A5, which only has half the RAM of last year’s Honeycomb tablets but compensates with a more powerful GPU and more efficient apps.

I think we have to manage our expectations about Android overall. Because it uses Dalvik as its primary application engine, we have to realize that it is less efficient than an OS that runs only native C++ or Objective-C applications. So that means it needs to use more RAM, and also more CPU horsepower to give you an equivalent experience with ambitious tablet apps.

And that also means that the trend for the Bill of Materials (BOM) on full-size Android tablets in order to keep pace with the iPad is going to tend to be higher than Apple’s no matter what, even if they keep pushing up the specs to keep pace on only a pure performance level.

Nevermind stuffing these tablets full of worthless stuff like high-res cameras and HDMI ports and expansion memory slots that nobody really uses just for the sake of competitive feature creep.

And I don’t even want to get into Apple’s supply chain advantages which Google’s OEM partners are going to have a very difficult time catching up with.

So I’ve used Android 4.0 for two weeks on a tablet. Is it better than Honeycomb? Yes. But it’s not without its own share of problems. It’s going to take some time for apps to catch up to it, and you might want to consider using hardware that is actually up to the task of providing an optimal experience with the new OS.

Have you used Android 4.0 on a tablet yet? Talk Back and Let Me Know.

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Optometric Billing-More Help Choosing A Mobile Platform




Saturday, January 14, 2012

Optometric Billing-More Help Choosing A Mobile Platform

This comes again from the tech blogs at ZDnet. In a related post I put up earlier in the week I counciled practice owners to choose wisely when I comes to choosing which platform to deploy in their practice when employing tablets and smartphones for every day use. I have a personal bias toward iOS for multiple reasons, Chief among them is the fact that Apple products are currently more secure than their Android counterparts.



The article below not only proves that my theory is correct but it also highlights that IOS is beginning to be more widely adopted by some of the world's largest corporations, most notably large firms that specialize in health care and bio-technology. Not only does large scale adoption of a product this early in its life-cycle signify that it is a product that at least warrants serious though about, adoptions on the scale of the one below by a bio-tech firm prove that this is a platform who's security is the one most worth entrusting your valuable information too.

"EVEN THOUGH ANDROID SEEMS LIKE IT IS GOING TO BE MORE POPULAR IT IS INHERANTLY LESS SECURE AS A RESULT OF THE FACT IT IS AN OPEN PLATFORM. DO YOU REALLY WANT TO RISK YOUR LISCENSE, YOUR PRACTICE AND VITAL PATIENT INFORMATION BECAUSE AN ANDROID DEVICE WAS CHEEPER OR MORE READILY AVAILABLE?! REMEMBER, HIPPA!"

Remember, opticXpress is your choice for the industry's most advanced and technologically aware optometric billing.





Why this Well-Known Biotech Firm Deploys 17,000 iPads and iPhones

There were some impressive enterprise deployments discussed at theAppNation conference in San Francisco on Thursday.

I’ll lead off with Genentech, the Bay Area biotech firm that is now a subsidiary of Roche. Their 7,000 iPad rollout was news to me, and ranks them sixth on my list of largest iPad deployments in the world.

(View the entire list of more than 530 enterprises that have publicly-confirmed iPad deployments here).

According to mobile application team manager, Paul Lanzi, Genentech has standardized on Apple for mobile, with 17,000 iOS device users worldwide (so by inference, 10,000 iPhones, though it surprises me less and less when I hear about companies deploying iPod Touches, too).

All of the Apple devices are corporate-owned, as the company doesn’t do Bring Your Own Device (BYOD).

Genentech does have 15,000 BlackBerry users, but they are only allowed to do e-mail, no apps. It doesn’t support Android due to the fragmentation-related hassle. “It’s a really tricky one,” Lanzi said.

While many firms talk about how their device deployments are driven by the ROI they hope to get from using apps, Genentech is actually following through. The company has deployed 60-some apps to employees. Indeed, Genentech rolled out its first mobile Web page even before the iPhone was released, said Lanzi. “We’ve already retired some apps,” he said.

The app that Lanzi was most proud of was Genentech’s app for its popular corporate intranet, which recently won an award for its usability. According to Lanzi, it’s not uncommon for several hundred employees to comment on a posted article, or for an article or posting to get 1,000 or more votes of ‘like’ or ‘dislike’. Extending the intranet to iPhone and iPad has significantly contributed to the activity.

Lanzi hopes to extend the app so that employees can write status updates and check-in to various locations on the Genentech campus like the cafeteria, auditorium, or particular branch office - just like people check into their favorite bar or restaurant on Foursquare today.

To date, most Genentech apps are custom-built. Security is eased by the fact that they all data is transmitted via a common Web Services Bus, Lanzi said. Genentech is belatedly starting to offer VPN access now.

Lanzi does expect Genentech to buy more off-the-shelf apps now that the selection is growing. These will be nominated by Genentech employees, not IT, he said. That’s a tangible sign that employees are gaining power on IT decisions impacting them.

Can apps be ’spammy’?

Another interesting enterprise user was medical journal publisher, Elsevier, which was candid about the problems its had pursuing its aggressive app marketing strategy.

The Dutch company has created 150 iOS apps mirroring the content from well-known journals like the Lancet, according to senior vice-president Scott Virkler.

(To learn about how healthcare’s embrace of mobility has also turned dangerous, read here.)

That has caused problems with Apple, which apparently considers Elsevier’s approach to be “spammy,” hypothesizes Virkler, as it rejected three Elsevier’s apps from the App Store last week.

Virkler blames Apple’s bias towards thinking of apps in terms of distinct features, rather than distinct content. Aggregating multiple journals into a single app, as Apple wants Elsevier to do, said Virkler, doesn’t make sense since the audiences for something like the Journal of Cardiology and The Sleep Medicine Review differ greatly.

Virkler does admit that Elsevier’s apps, as they are today, don’t add much value over the journal articles other than bringing them to devices. There are plans to change that, by adding relevant content such as medical databases related to that field or specialty. And possibly prodded by Apple, but Elsevier is also thinking of creating new apps centered around specific topics that would aggregate content from different journals.

SAP CIO Oliver Bussmann gave the keynote speech at AppNation, talking about how SAP has deployed 40-some apps internally to 14,000 iPad users, which ranks it the second-largest user of iPads today. That figure could go grow to 20,000 iPads by year’s end.

If you want to read more about SAP’s aggressive mobile plans for 2012, including around Android, BYOD and apps, read more here. Or if you want to learn more about how SAP is building its own secure, enterprise-friendly alternative to DropBox, read here. Or if you are an enterprise developer wanting to hear more about SAP’s Enterprise App Store and the growing partner ecosystem around it, read this.

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Optometric Billing-Which Platform To Choose If you're Going Mobile

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Optometric Billing-Which Platform To Choose If you're Going Mobile

One of my favorite tech writers is Adrian Kingsley Hughes at ZDnet. Below is a post he wrote this week about iOS vs Android in terms of sales. Though I don't think that this is likely to be a long term trend, given the fact that there are a vast majority of Android handsets to each iPhone available, I do want to point out that as the computing world goes mobile you will begin to try and do the same for your practices. The most obvious place to begin looking to "mobilize" your office is through the use of smartphones and tablets to make the transition to EMR/EHR a smoother one. Here is the number one thing to keep in mind:

EVEN THOUGH ANDROID SEEMS LIKE IT IS GOING TO BE MORE POPULAR IT IS INHERANTLY LESS SECURE AS A RESULT OF THE FACT IT IS AN OPEN PLATFORM. DO YOU REALLY WANT TO RISK YOUR LISCENSE, YOUR PRACTICE AND VITAL PATIENT INFORMATION BECAUSE AN ANDROID DEVICE WAS CHEEPER OR MORE READILY AVAILABLE?! REMEMBER, HIPPA!

That being said, take a look at the ZDNet article and conclude for yourself. Remember, you can always call opticXpress for help going mobile. Our software runs on iPads and Android tablets!

"In the sales war between the iPhone and Android, latest figures from the NPD group suggest that while iPhone sales are on the up, while sales of Android device have slumped preciptously.

Between Q3 2011 and October/November sales of iPhones soared from 26% to a whopping 43%. During the same period sales of Android devices fell from a high of 60% to 47%.

Here’s a chart:

This chart clearly shows how the smartphone race is between iOS and Android. RIM has pretty much vanished into oblivion and none of the other players were worth adding to the chart.

Is the the iPhone 4S effect that we are seeing here, or is it indicative of a deeper problem and perhaps a slowing down of the Android machine? Hard to tell based om just a single data point. What will be interesting is seeing where this goes during the year.

Also according to NPD, two out of every three phones sold in the Oct/Nov period was a smartphone, while during Q3 11 this figure was only 59%. Basic phones only accounted for 15%, while messaging phones didn’t fare much better with 18% of sales.

The cellphone market is now very much the domain of the smartphone."