Remember the Wang word processor? If you're not old enough to remember, let me fill you in:
Back in the Olden Days, before the PC existed, there was a company called Wang. Wang's business was building word processor machines. They were very good machines. Eventually, "Wang" and "word processor" became virtually synonymous. Wang prospered.
Although they might not have seen it that way, Wang was building PCs. But PCs that only ran one program: the Wang word processing software. Wang's word processing machine was expensive, so only companies bought its products. One day, a group of hobbyists started putting together hardware very similar to Wang's, but with two big differences: their machines could run many different software programs, and, best of all, their machine was inexpensive. Inexpensive enough that individuals could afford them. Soon, other groups started building similar machines. Before long, two very smart people started a company called Apple, and the era of the personal computer was born.
Meanwhile, back at Wang, management didn't understand that their hardware and software could be supplanted by the PC. And while they had a huge head start building machines that could have easily been turned into PC's, they never saw the writing on the wall. So Wang hit the wall, and never took part in an industry that could have made them successful beyond their wildest dreams. They weren't lacking smarts. They were lacking vision.
Unfortunately, this story can be retold many times over with different names.
Which brings me to the Blackberry. My friends, what happened to Wang is now happening to RIM, the manufacturer of Blackberry phones. Sad to say, while RIM virtually owned the smartphone (oops, I forgot I wasn't going to use that term any longer) market, they have lost it to Apple and Google.
"Yes, but the [Wang / Blackberry] runs [a better word processor / more secure phone software] than Apple's." said the management of [Wang / RIM]. But the writing is on the wall.
Don't consume Blackberries. Apples are better for you.
That last statement, while true, should not be construed as an endorsement.
Be sure to read our next post: "Troubles with HIPAAs"
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Sunday, July 22, 2012
Smartphones, tablets, and the medical professions
Two powerful trends are converging to make portable devices increasingly important in medicine:
- The computing power available to these small devices is growing by leaps and bounds. You are now able to hold way more computing power in your pocket than your desktop computer had just a handful of years ago. And the sophistication of the software available to run on them leaves that desktop compter in the dust.
- Physicians, especially recent medical school graduates, have become comfortable with (some would use the term "addicted to") smartphones and tablets. Rare indeed is the young physician who doesn't carry a smartphone and use it throughout the day.
These two trends, of course, are not independent of each other. In fact they feed off each other. The tech-savvy physician with a penchant for gadgets, therefore, often looks for new ways to use them both during their workday and afterwards as well (assuming there is any afterwords worth talking about).
In this blog we will be talking about the use of smartphones and tablets, and how they relate to people's lives with an emphasis, although not exclusively, on medical professionals.
By the way, we are tired of writing "smartphone." In fact, we don't even like the term. They're not smart (yet). So we will use the term "phone" as a generic reference to them. Besides, we believe that the the old style cell phone, often referred to as a "feature phone" is on its way out.
Be sure to read our next post: "Are Blackberries good for you?"
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