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Fri, 20 Apr 2012

Absurd Asheesh lunch: Friday April 20, MIT Media Lab, 1 PM

I'm visiting the Boston area for a few hours (like literally less than 24), and so I thought I'd stop by the MIT Media Lab's 5th floor lounge and have lunch there with Deb, and anyone else who wants to join.

Bring lunch from home, or buy food at the lovely MIT trucks, or just come for the company.

It's quite easy to get to; take the Red Line to Kendall, then walk to the end of the street with the food trucks. If you need help finding me/it, call my cell phone!

P.S. I'm in town just while in transit to Troy, NY, to run an open source teaching workshop there.

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Thu, 20 Oct 2011

Herbert's Birthday is October 21

So if you want to come to November (91 Belmont St, #2, 02143) on Fri Oct 21, at 7:30 PM, there will be snacks and drinks.

My beloved stuffed dog will be nine human years old, which is plenty old!

If you bring things, potluck-style, that will make things super great. You can show up without potluck-type things, too.

Representative photos of Herbert:

Herbert has no need for material posessions, so gifts will be roundly rejected. Herbert and I are tourists in the dunya.

Also, I will be showing a music video once per hour. Mostly R.E.M. with maybe a sprinkling of They Might Be Giants. Bad Religion, too? Who knows.

You are all quite invited to invite people I would like!

Yours truly,

-- Asheesh.

P.S. Herbert's birthday is one day after mine.

P.P.S. ZIP code matters!

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Mon, 31 May 2010

West Philly Free Software meetup: Tue Jun 1, 7:30 PM, Rice N Spice

In West Philadelphia, free software and open source fans are going to meet up for dinner on Tuesday (June 1), at 7:30 PM. Want to join us?

We'll be meeting and eating at an inexpensive, tasty Indian place called Rice N Spice. It's located at 4205 Chestnut St.

(Need a map?)

It looks like a grocery store, but if you push on forward past the shelves of packaged goods, there are seats and tables. I'll be there at 7:30 sharp. There's a picture of me on the OpenHatch about page.

If you live, work, or can get to West Philadelphia and like free and/or open source software, come on out! And if you can't afford to eat out, just come by and sit with us. It's quite a casual venue.

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Thu, 12 Mar 2009

Today at ETech: Baobab Health Partnership

(I mostly live-blogged this; excuse the messiness.)

Mike McKay gave a fantastic presentation about his work at Baobab Health Partnership. To quote his blurb:

Malawi, Africa, has a population of 14 million. One million are HIV positive and there are just 280 doctors in the country.

Baobab Health Partnership took i-openers, added a PIC to create a touch-screen, and hacked on Power over Ethernet, and configured them to be used as data entry and analysis workstations for HIV clinics in Malawi.

The i-opener was an "Internet appliance" sold as a simple web terminal: given a monthly subscription for the i-opener service, you could have an inexpensive, trouble-free web browsing experience. As it happened, the community swiftly repurposed the devices. According to one i-opener hacker, "What follows is discussion and photographs of a most righteous hack, turning the nearly-free Netpliance i-opener web appliance into a full featured pseudolaptop / electronic photo album." Slashdot saw a lot of excitement around these in 2000 and 2001, but they lacked Ethernet or wifi, so they fell out of favor.

I wanted to give you that background so I can explain that the Baobab Health terminal is the coolest thing I have ever heard of anyone doing with an i-opener. This puts my kitchen recipe terminal plan to shame. Check out patient registration video that shows the terminals in use.

The software stack is all open source: They have an Ubuntu server running MySQL and Ruby on Rails, and the user interface is just an AJAX web application running in full-screen mode. It was developed by Malawaian developers who, says McKay, "were trained in VB. Now they hang out on IRC and flame people on mailing lists. They're part of the Internet."

As they bought a few from eBay for about thirty dollars, they noticed that one person in Nebraska seemed to keep listing them. It turned out that he had been stockpiling the until he figured out something great to do with them. In the end, the Nebraskan gave them two thousand i-openers. (The twentieth century rises again.)

As far as impact, McKay pointed out decision support makes a huge difference in healthcare, as Provonost found at Hopkins years ago with checklists. He also talked about how they data validation dramatically changed the clinics' ability to record useful data; most of the previous paper records were found to be useless as they began to import them into the computerized system. Through comparisons to other people of similar age and gender, they can encourage correct weight measurement data entry. Danny O'Brien pointed out that this does not degrade well in the case of equipment or network failure. I believe Danny was hinting at the question of what happens when the entire system fails (backups? data loss?); McKay understood it to refer to what happens during temporary failures. He explained that with their generators, they've had very good reliability. When the computers fail, many clinics take paper records instead, though some simply lock the doors and stop seeing patients. That clinics choose the latter approach has provided strong motivation for their programmers to fix reliability issues!

McKay went on an aside to talk about having his appendix removed when he was in the States. "All of a sudden, I was exposed to the American health care system, and I was shocked at how broken it is. There's no computers anywhere! The only computers around are at billing."

To get to electronic medical records in the US, he says, "Maybe we just need a disruptive piece of technology."

As for how to spread the program to other countries or circumstances, McKay explained, "One of our problems is the next generation of hardware. I'm not going to send this hacked i-opener to a country where there aren't technicians who know what to do with them."

The program was started by Gerry Douglas in 2000. Douglas is now based in Pittsburgh, though he spends four to five months of the year in Malawi. Also, the data collected by the project inform policy discussions at a quarterly HIV Forum in Malawi. A man from the NIH suggested that they work on sharing that data and doing more research.

The presentation was fantastic; the work is brilliant; and the man is friendly and thoughtful.


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